Ouch ... those BCV ones sure are a buzzkill.. but again the road thing is present EVERYWHERE at SSR .. its inescapable pretty much everywhere at the resort.
Well, if we're talking about room / balcony views, then it's not inescapable. Only a small percentage of rooms have a view that includes any roadways or parking lots. Most have very pleasant views which include Downtown Disney, the many interior ponds, the LBV golf course or a simple lawn.
As others have pointed out, SSR (and OKW, Caribbean Beach, etc.) are designed in a condo-style layout with many individual buildings. The land on which SSR sits has been in use by Disney for about three decades now. As Sammie stated, before it was SSR it was the Disney Institute and before that it was the Disney Village.
If you want to read about the history of the resort, look here:
http://waltdatedworld.bravepages.com/id121.htm
(BTW, if you look closely at the picture on that page you will see structures that still stand today. The turquoise building toward the upper right is the performance center which (I believe) is just east of the main pool. The red octagonal building to the left of that is the Carriage House. And right at the center of the photo, about 1" down from the top you can see the peak of the watertower-like structure that sits just outside the pool.)
The general layout of the resort has been in place for many years. When transitioning the property from the Disney Institute to SSR, the built all new guest buildings, but the infrastructure largely remains intact.
I guess my only point here is that there isn't a single "right" way to build a Disney resort. It sounds like you just learned that you don't like the condo-style developments. Lesson learned. But as you can see in this post, there are many of us who embrace that sort of layout. Different strokes...
When Walt Disney envisioned Disney World the idea was to insulate the overall resort experience from the real world.
Ummm, actually Walt had almost no input into Walt Disney World. He died 5 years before the resort opened and long before construction even began. Walt's original intention for the property was to use it to construct HIS Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow. If Walt had stayed with us for a few more years, the Florida land would probably be home to a futuristic city similar to the model currently on display in the Tomorrowland Transit Authority. THAT was Walt's vision for his "Florida project."
Unfortunately, upon his death, Walt had left behind precious little to help flesh-out his ideas for the Florida community. So the Disney execs basically built a carbon copy of
Disneyland, surrounded it with a few resort hotels, and the rest is history.
While much of WDW is based upon a philosophy that Walt left behind, very little of it bears his personal touch.
You can walk just steps away at one of those Epcot resort areas or VWL that you illustrate and feel transported to a Disney fantasy.. I cant name one single place at Saratoga where we felt transported anywhere special... it just felt like a place to park and sleep.
We'll just have to agree to disagree on that point. I find SSR to be very appealing. It has a small-town feel to it, roads and all. And the balcony view of Downtown Disney is, in my opinion, the second best view available at all of the resorts (second only to the BW view.)
I cant argue with people who feel otherwise .. we all have different sensibilities. I would be SHOCKED however if Disney ever built another resort like SSR.
Actually SSR is at least the second of its type. Old Key West, the flagship
DVC resort, has many of the same features that you apparently dislike.
Additionally, about 1/3 of the rooms at the new AKL DVC building will have parking lot views (See map:
http://advc.disney.go.com/media/dvc/languagespecific/eng/resorts/animalKingdomVillas/DAKVMap.pdf) and it's a 1/2 mile walk--outdoors--to get from the new building to the existing Jambo House facility if one wanted to dine at Boma or Jiko, use the pool, etc.