Walt Disney World Park Hours Through Christmas!

The holidays will be here before we know it! Here are the posted hours for Disney Parks through Christmas:

Magic Kingdom:

  • December 1 – 19: 9:00am to 8:00pm
  • December 20 – 26: 9:00am to 7:00pm

EPCOT:

  • December 1 – 3: 12:00pm to 9:00pm
  • December 4 – 6: 11:00am to 9:00pm
  • December 7 – 10: 12:00pm to 9:00pm
  • December 11 – 13: 11:00am to 9:00pm
  • December 14 – 17: 12:00pm to 9:00pm
  • December 18 – 19: 11:00am to 9:00pm
  • December 20 – 26: 12:00pm to 8:00pm

Disney’s Hollywood Studios:

  • December 1 – 26: 10:00am to 7:00pm

Disney’s Animal Kingdom:

  • December 1 – 3: 9:00am to 5:00pm
    December 4 – 6: 8:00am to 6:00pm
    December 7 – 10: 9:00am to 5:00pm
    December 11 – 13: 8:00am to 6:00pm
    December 14 – 17: 9:00am to 5:00pm
    December 18 – 19: 8:00am to 6:00pm
    December 20 – 26: 9:00am to 5:00pm

Keep in mind, you’ll want to check the app before planning your visit as Disney has been known to add an extra hour or two on select days due to higher crowd levels. Happy Holiday planning Disney fans!

New Space Mountain Movie in the Works!

Via DisDining.com

Any Space Mountain fans out there? This beloved Disney classic located at both Disneyland and Walt Disney World has been a family favorite among many for years now. Seemingly never losing its popularity, it seems Disney has decided to work up a new Space Mountain movie!

As shared by Hollywood Reporter: “Disney is getting ready to ride Space Mountain onto the big screen. The venerable ride is getting the movie treatment, with the studio hiring Joby Harold to write the script for what is to be a live-action adaptation. Harold will also produce with partner and wife Tory Tunnell and their Safehouse Pictures banner. Also producing is Rideback, the shingle run by Dan Lin and Jonathan Eirich and was behind Disney’s billion dollar-grossing Aladdin.”

“Logline details are being kept hidden amidst the rings of Saturn but it is described as a family adventure. The project, which is in the early stages, is intended for theatrical release.”

New Aerial Photos of Tron Coaster Construction at Magic Kingdom

Walt Disney World’s new Tron coaster, Tron Lightcylce Power Run, has been a fun one to follow along with as construction moves forward. Thanks to aerial photos taken by @bioreconstruct shared on Twitter, we can take a look at seven photos of Tron’s progress.

Aerial look at Space Mountain and Tron. A section of the canopy is up.

Disney’s initial deadline was to have the coaster ready to ride in 2021 – in time to celebrate Disney’s 50th Anniversary. With the pandemic hitting, construction halted back in March but the construction resumed shortly after. Disney has not announced if there will be a delay to the opening.

Some Dining Options Returning to Disney’s Hollywood Studios & Magic Kingdom

Via DisneyLists.com

Disney has released details on several dining options that are returning to Disney’s Hollywood Studios and Magic Kingdom this fall. Catch all the details below!

Here are all the details from Disney Cast member Laurel Slater:

Fall is just around the corner and recently we’ve shared some pretty exciting updates about Halloween fun planned for Magic Kingdom Park and tasty treats that will be available at all our parks. As part of our phased approach to reopening, we’re adding more Guest-favorite dining choices this fall at Magic Kingdom Park and Disney’s Hollywood Studios – which you’ll definitely want to add to your fall dining must-do list.

At Disney’s Hollywood Studios, there’s some Halloween fun in store at Hollywood & Vine where Minnie’s Seasonal Dining is set to return September 25. While it may look a little different than the last time you visited, you can get in the spooky spirit during Minnie’s Halloween Dine with a monster feast served to your table where you will be able to wave and snap photos of your favorite characters such as Minnie Mouse, Mickey Mouse, and their friends. It’s a boo-tastic time filled with Halloween décor and music, scary good food, and more! 

Beginning Sept. 24, Guests can enjoy dining in the enchanted, fairytale setting of Cinderella’s Royal Table at Magic Kingdom Park. Enjoy a delicious regal banquet with unforgettable main courses ranging from roasted chicken breast and tenderloin of beef to chef’s fish of the day. The princesses will be taking a break from their royal duties greeting Guests, but there will be plenty of delicious fare and fun to be enjoyed in this beautiful, one-of-a-kind restaurant.

Gaston's Tavern Menu - Magic Kingdom

Both of these immersive dining experiences will be available for reservations on DisneyWorld.com and in the My Disney Experience app beginning September 11.

Additionally, some more snack and quick-service options are reopening soon! Gaston’s Tavern at Magic Kingdom Park will return on September 4 and the ABC Commissary at Disney’s Hollywood Studios reopens for walk-in quick service for lunch beginning October 8. With so many delicious delights to try this fall, I’ll certainly be coming to the parks hungry and ready to dig in!

Disney Shares History of The PeopleMover

The PeopleMover… simply one of the best, classic attractions at Disney. There’s just something about gliding above Tomorrowland at Walt Disney World that makes our day! Now, Max Lark with D23.com shares the history of the beloved attraction with his “Worlds in Motion: A Celebration of the PeopleMover”. Enjoy!

The PeopleMover at Disneyland played a major role in conveying the message of Tomorrowland, a future-focused land all about movement, optimism, and the promise of technology.

In his book Designing Disney: Imagineering and the Art of the Show, Disney Legend John Hench provided an elegant description of this kaleidoscopic place where bright colors, sleek shapes, and whirring technology inspired guests to dream of what could be possible. “In Tomorrowland the view from the Submarine Lagoon was dedicated to action, an orchestration of movement, including the aerial Skyway, the surface-level Autopia, the elevated Monorail and PeopleMover, and the underwater and surface Submarine Voyage. These were all woven into a pattern looping through, around, over, and under each other. The vehicles were streamlined forms with modernistic lines that implied movement. The entire area was staged kinetically to suggest the energy of modern urban life.”

In his book, Hench writes about how Walt discovered the core of his idea for PeopleMover, observing that “transportation as an attraction” had become a pivotal design element. “Walt was always looking for inventive new ways of moving guests around,” Hench wrote. “We discovered the idea for the New York World’s Fair WEDway PeopleMover system while on a business trip to the Ford Motor Company in Detroit. Walt and I were invited to visit the mill where Ford made steel for car bodies. We saw a device for handling steel ingots, masses of glowing red-hot metal. The ingots were moved around on tracks of powered rollers from one area to another while being transformed into sheet steel for making cars. Walt asked, ‘Do you think we could put some kind of seat on that type of conveyor, or some kind of arrangement for people to ride on… do you think this thing would handle it?” I said, ‘Sure, look at the weight carried here. I bet that Roger Broggie would know how to do it.’ Roger devised a platen, a flat metal surface, for the bottom of each guest vehicle to make contact with the powered wheels in the conveyor track. We could check the bed of rollers at night to make sure that they were all working. The system was so simple that it never failed to provide guests with a smooth ride.”

Walt first deployed the basic concept for what would become the PeopleMover at the 1964-’65 New York World’s Fair with his Magic Skyway at the Ford Motor Company’s Wonder Rotunda, where guests could ride through the exhibit in one of Ford’s new convertible automobiles.

peoplemover

The PeopleMover opened at Disneyland on July 2, 1967. The technology, innovative in 1967, featured electric motor-driven rubber wheels embedded in the track that propelled the vehicles. “The idea of track-mounted propulsion wheels that moved ride vehicles first appeared on the 1959 Disneyland Matterhorn Bobsleds, was then adapted for the Ford Magic Skyway, and finally used as a very practical propulsion method for the PeopleMover,” says former Imagineer and Disney Legend Bob Gurr, who, for nearly 40 years, helped move many a happy Disney theme park guest aboard vehicles and ride conveyances of his own design. “While the technical details varied, the basic scheme was the same.”

From the beginning, the emphasis was not only on moving guests from one place to another, but to contribute to a sense of non-stop movement for guests watching from the ground—while affording passengers a bird’s-eye view of surrounding attractions. “In the same manner as the Disneyland Railroad becoming wildly popular as a trip through a ‘new land,’ where one could get a glimpse of exciting attractions to explore after their trip, the PeopleMover would do the same,” Gurr adds. “From an elevated guideway, one could ‘preview’ an array of enticing futuristic places to visit. Walt also envisioned that a PeopleMover could do the same for other venues, such as shopping centers, expositions, and wild animal parks.”

“In designing Tomorrowland,” Hench says in Designing Disney, “Imagineers considered the track layouts and structures to be as much design elements as the vehicles, and intended them to convey the same meaning. On the PeopleMover, the structural forms are designed to support physical forms in motion. The cantilevered and curved track and the winding curves in the structural elements create continuous eye movement for guests, because the eye interprets line as the record of action. The shapes are organic, with softened and tense edges that look like muscles, expressing movement. The streamlined look was efficient, but also beautiful. Normally, it would have been easier to design boxed, right-angle columns; we opted for equally strong curvilinear structures supporting delicate, futuristic-looking roadbeds.”

peoplemover

Although the PeopleMover closed at Disneyland on August 21, 1995, a variation—the WEDway PeopleMover—opened at Walt Disney World on July 1, 1975, which provides to this day a journey in five-car trains, powered by environmentally friendly linear-induction motors. The attraction was re-named Tomorrowland Transit Authority in 1994, and rechristened again in 2010 as the Tomorrowland Transit Authority PeopleMover.

Further proof, as if any is needed, of the visionary nature of Walt’s imagination, is the below-ground subway system at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas. The system, which was built by Walt Disney Imagineering’s WED Transportation Systems in 1981, provides efficient transportation between terminals and the Marriott Hotel, operates in a circuit, and total round-trip time is approximately 18 minutes. The unique Subway train is the only WEDway PeopleMover built by The Walt Disney Company outside of a Disney property. It uses much of the same mechanical technology employed by the Tomorrowland Transit Authority PeopleMover at Walt Disney World.

“Speaking for myself historically, I seriously valued its ‘not-too far-out’ conservative attraction configuration,” Gurr observes. “One that might be a bit mundane, but very reliable. I’ve discovered this fact many times over as more state-of-the-art attractions encountered difficulties. Having never been a trained engineer, that is my big discovery!”