South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Fort Wilderness cabin makeover underway

- By Dewayne Bevil

Walt Disney World is replacing and upgrading all 365 cabins at Fort Wilderness Resort & Campground, a process that’s part assembly line and part intricate dance.

The existing cabins, in place since 1999, are manufactur­ed homes on wheels.

They’ll be replaced with permanent structures the same size as their predecesso­rs — 504 square feet. The first of the outgoing trailers rolled away last week.

The replacemen­t cabins will be Disney Vacation Club properties, although they will be available to people who are not timeshare owners, too. The average price for the existing cabins has been about $500 per night.

DVC members will be in the first set of new units on July 1. The total project is scheduled to be completed next March.

Disney is tackling the project with innovation and efficiency and minimal disruption­s to Fort Wilderness visitors and operations.

The 750-acre resort, which debuted with Disney World in 1971, also hosts RVs, tents and has other recreation­al activities.

“We’re very close to all of the other occupied areas. It’s not like a new resort where we’re demo-ing the whole site,” said Todd Watzel, manager of programs with Disney’s facility-asset management team, which wrangles WDW renovation­s. Fort Wilderness has many trees and other natural features that they didn’t want to disturb, he said.

Right now, large portions of the cabins — the walls, floors, roofs — are being built and stored in a warehouse in south Orlando. Those pieces will be moved to the site to be assembled into the new dwellings.

Among the constructi­on challenges are the tight quarters of Fort Wilderness and the placement of the cabins, which are grouped along several tree-lined loops of one-lane roadways.

“We have a very logistic challenge that we’re overcoming by pre-planning,” said Juan Quiroga, CEO and president of JCQ Services, an Orlando-based contractor.

Quiroga and contractor Jeff Friedrich formed J&J Venture Group for the Fort Wilderness project.

“From day one, [we’ve been] trying to figure out how to make this all work and do it in a year,” said Friedrich, owner of Friedrich Watkins Co.

They found efficienci­es by working out of the warehouse. A steel-frame machine by FrameCAD takes metal from a spool and creates specified pieces, cut to size, that are part of the cabin walls.

“This thing prints out metal studs. It drills and dimples them. It punches all the holes for all the mechanical and electrical stuff to go through the walls, And it does it with less than 1% waste,” Friedrich said.

Watzel added, “You know things are going to match and mate when all the buildings get put together.”

All 365 new cabins are identical in constructi­on. More than 120 walls are ready in the warehouse. Cabin plans require 14 apiece.

The warehouse is a controlled environmen­t for workers and elbow room.

“You can have 50 people here working on it. You can’t have 50 people working in [a] cabin,” Watzel said during a warehouse tour.

Some painting and woodwork also are done in the manufactur­ing warehouse, where the air-conditioni­ng units are stored. Furniture and appliances for the new cabins are kept in a different Central Florida warehouse until it’s time for installati­on.

Building materials will arrive on trucks at the Fort Wilderness loops in the order of assembly, moving around single file, lot by lot, before starting the next cabin on the road. Progress on the cabins will be staggered, with the project done a loop at a time.

 ?? WALT DISNEY CO./COURTESY ?? New Fort Wilderness cabins will have prefabrica­ted parts made in a south Orlando warehouse but assembled at the Walt Disney World resort. The changeover will be phased in over several months.
WALT DISNEY CO./COURTESY New Fort Wilderness cabins will have prefabrica­ted parts made in a south Orlando warehouse but assembled at the Walt Disney World resort. The changeover will be phased in over several months.
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