Goofey Drool
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2007
- Messages
- 355
Maybe they should add a nostalgialand...lol



Do more research.
See what REALLY happened.
I am astounded at how many people cannot grasp this. This attraction is all about the tommorow of the child. Not the tomorrow of mankind. Can the track and cars be updated? Sure. Make them look like Teslas with electric motors. Make them look like open wheel F1 cars. Or NASCAR cars. Or super futuristic Jetson mobiles. But at its core, the attraction works (for children) on so many levels. It is great watching kids actually control a three dimensional moving vehicle instead of the joystick on an X Box.
Common sense and Walt's vision of the attraction. The Speedway was never supposed to be a showcase for the future and the possibilities of the human race. I rode the Speedway within 6 months of its opening. Even in 1972 there was nothing futuristic about the attraction. Cars existed. Roads existed. The cars looked like ones that you could see in everyday life. Are you suggesting that the Speedway was somehow supposed to teach us of the wonders that man could achieve if he just kept reaching for the stars? Hardly. The Speedway was (and remains) all about the child who dreams of his or her own future, and envisions himself or herself at some late point in their life sitting behind the wheel of a real race car. It is an attraction that plays off of an emotion, which was what Walt wanted. It wasn't about driving to the moon. Or Mars.On what are you basing this statement?
Yes, that is quite a showcase for future and the possibilities of the human (or monster) race.Personally, the day can't come soon enough that we discover laughter as a vital renewable resource harvested by adorable bogeymen from an alternate universe.

Common sense and Walt's vision of the attraction. The Speedway was never supposed to be a showcase for the future and the possibilities of the human race. I rode the Speedway within 6 months of its opening. Even in 1972 there was nothing futuristic about the attraction. Cars existed. Roads existed. The cars looked like ones that you could see in everyday life. Are you suggesting that the Speedway was somehow supposed to teach us of the wonders that man could achieve if he just kept reaching for the stars? Hardly. The Speedway was (and remains) all about the child who dreams of his or her own future, and envisions himself or herself at some late point in their life sitting behind the wheel of a real race car. It is an attraction that plays off of an emotion, which was what Walt wanted. It wasn't about driving to the moon. Or Mars.
Nope. My 8 year old lists Peoplemover as his favorite, too. He also like the Speedway.At our last trip my son was just a little too short to ride Space Mountain and my daughter was just two. The only thing my kids liked in Tomorrowland was the people mover. They rode on it 4 times. My son still claims it was his favorite ride in all of WDW. But he might just be trolling me.
The fact that he died in 1966 doesn't mean that he had no input as to what the the park would include. It's not as if he bought up all that land and had no idea what was going to be built on it. Here is an excerpt from an allears history of the attraction.When MK was built, it was just copied from DL and re-themed to be called the Grand Prix Raceway. Walt had nothing to do with the Grand Prix Raceway as he died in 1966.
The problem with your theory is that it is not in a park that has limited space. There's enough room there to add an equal number of new attractions. 27000 acres is a lot of land, all they have to to do is utilize more of it. As I stated earlier, I don't want to hear about the evils of pollution and the "smell" if any of you took a motor vehicle to the parks, you added more of a footprint then that small attraction does.
The fact that he died in 1966 doesn't mean that he had no input as to what the the park would include. It's not as if he bought up all that land and had no idea what was going to be built on it. Here is an excerpt from an allears history of the attraction.
By the time planning had begun for the Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World, the Interstate System was old hat and less than exciting. Yet the Imagineers knew they wanted to offer young drivers a place to feel the freedom of the road. Thus, the Grand Prix Raceway was born.
Note the use of the phrase "old hat". There was nothing futuristic about the attraction, then or now. It's all about letting little kids pretend. Can't we afford them that? Re-design the entrance and have it absorbed by Fantasyland as Robo suggests. It wouldn't change the purpose of the attraction.
I don't think every attraction has to be based on a movie. Many of the best attractions came before the movies (Haunted Mansion, Pirates). While this isn't my favorite, my kids love it. I wouldn't be in favor of removing it even with the noise and the fumes.
everytime I walk by it I shake my head. Does not belong, no nostalgia, no movie or character tie in. Feels like it belongs at a six flags.
Anyone willing to defend it?