Miami Herald (Sunday)

DISNEY WORLD

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“Personally, I couldn’t imagine a reality where another full park gets constructe­d in Orlando,” Morrow said. “There’s a lot of infrastruc­ture cost and high [capital expenditur­e] cost in developing new properties. But we have plenty of parks in Orlando that just could be bigger or have more things to do or be expanded.”

Dennis Speigel, CEO of Cincinnati-based Internatio­nal Theme Park Services, anticipate­s fresh, big ideas for Disney World, including a new theme park, and he expects movement soon.

“I’m a confirmed believer that in a short period of time, we’re going to see Disney announce another gate,” he said. “I think they will announce something within the next 24 months, for sure. … From what I’ve heard, this has been being worked on now for the last five, eight, 10 years.”

Speigel points to the availabili­ty of land and intellectu­al property, the growing tourism market and the 2025 opening of Epic Universe, Universal Orlando’s third theme park now under constructi­on, as motivating factors for Disney.

“An announceme­nt of attraction expansion is one level of announceme­nt, but a new gate is a whole different stratum and sends a different message to tourists,” he said. “Disney needs to get this announceme­nt out there to remain the dominant force in Orlando, the mecca of the themepark industry.”

Expansion would probably follow a familiar pattern, said Len Testa, who runs the Touring Plans, a vacation-planning site.

“Attraction­s that are most popular, the highestrat­ed, are super-headliner rides based on beloved multipart movie franchises. Those are the kinds of rides that bring people to Central Florida,” he said.

Lands at Disney and Universal parks are based on “Cars,” “Star Wars” and the “Harry Potter” series.

During a D23 Expo session in September 2022, Josh D’Amaro, chairman of Disney Parks, Experience­s and Products, floated a handful of ideas for Magic Kingdom, specifical­ly in the area “beyond Big Thunder,” the Frontierla­nd roller coaster. He mentioned ideas based on the “Coco” and “Encanto” films as well as Disney’s lineup of animated villains.

Testa said he believes the villain land will happen.

“People love the villains, and the villains can do things,” he said. “They can interact with guests in a way that regular characters can’t. Like they can be sassy in a way that other characters can’t.”

He imagines separately ticketed villain events in addition to a land of their own.

“That would sell a lot, so I think that has some legs,” he said.

In another session of D23, Disney’s official fan club, officials announced that Animal Kingdom’s DinoLand area would be remade with a “tropical Americas” theme. Details were sketchy, but there were oblique references to “Encanto” and Indiana Jones. The Dinosaur ride running in DinoLand shares a ride system with the Indiana Jones Adventure attraction in Disneyland.

Testa expects a fullblown, revamped DinoLand,

once the site of Primeval Whirl, a coaster that closed in 2020 and demolished in 2021.

“I think, again, you’re going to see a big thrill ride, you’ll see a familyfrie­ndly, possibly dark ride, possibly water-based ride, sort of intermedia­te thing like Na’vi River Journey [at Animal Kingdom], and then you’ll see a third ride, which is, you know, the Magic Carpets of Aladdin [at Magic Kingdom] or something like that,” he said.

Duplicatin­g rides or lands from other Disney parks might soothe those who cry out “be fair to Florida” when Disney World is not the home base of announced projects.

“A lot of feedback I’m getting is about the attraction­s and lands being built overseas. Those parks seem to be updating far better and quicker than what we have here in Florida,” said Michele Atwood, owner of The Main Street Mouse, a theme park website, and author of Disney-related books.

A World of Frozen land opened at Hong Kong Disneyland in November, followed by a “Zootopia”themed land at Shanghai Disneyland in December. Fantasy Springs, which will have elements from “Tangled,” “Frozen” and “Peter Pan,” opens at Tokyo DisneySea in June.

“A lot of folks would like to see WDW follow suit with those updates, including myself,” Atwood said.

In recent years, Disney has completed projects at Epcot, including Remy’s Ratatouill­e Adventure ride, a “Moana” walkthroug­h attraction and Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind roller coaster.

Mickey & Minnie’s Runway Railway opened at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, which became the home of Star Wars:

Galaxy’s Edge, a land with multiple attraction­s. Tron: Lightcycle/Run, an indoor-outdoor coaster, opened at Magic Kingdom, where Tiana’s

Bayou Adventure, the reimagined Splash Mountain attraction, is scheduled to debut this summer.

Iger is open to duplicatio­n. While Pandora, the World of Avatar opened at Animal Kingdom in 2017, there are plans to add one at Disneyland in California.

“That doesn’t mean we can’t put one in somewhere in Asia and somewhere in Europe, for instance,” he said at the Morgan Stanley conference. “We opened up a Frozen land in Hong Kong in November — tremendous response to that. … Build it with excellence and they will come.”

Creating more options makes sense, but it also could overwhelm a vacationin­g family with time restrictio­ns, Morrow said.

“Also in the industry, and the entertainm­ent industry as a whole, there is a surge of what I would call the smaller experience­s happening. These are the things that take two hours to do, not eight hours to do,” he said.

“They might be in a theme park/might not be in a theme park kind of experience. I think is something people are really interested in,” Morrow said.

Universal is developing that sort of attraction elsewhere. It plans to open a kid-oriented park in Frisco, Texas, and a year-round Halloween offering in Las Vegas. Morrow also points to Area15, a multi-stop art and entertainm­ent district in Vegas that announced a second location would come to Orlando.

“Think many parks, many experience­s with multiple attraction­s … but it doesn’t take all day,” he said.

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