Review: Disney’s Art of Animation Resort
By Dave Shute
The Value Resorts Art of Animation Pop Century Movies Sports Music
OVERVIEW: DISNEY’S ART OF ANIMATION RESORT
Note: guests at Disney’s Art of Animation Resort are eligible for Disney World’s Early Entry program, and have the ability to pre-book as early as seven days before check-in Lightning Lane Multi Pass and Lightning Lane Single Pass rides. They are NOT eligible for its Extended Evening Hours.
Disney’s Art of Animation Resort opened in 2012, with two major room types–
- Four-person Little Mermaid standard rooms sized similarly to standard rooms in other value resorts, and
- Large, six-person Family Suites
Since then, among my 160+ stays in Disney World-owned rooms, we’ve stayed at Art of Animation nine times–seven times in the family suites, and two time in the Little Mermaid rooms.
These two room types share all resort services.
Otherwise they are profoundly different, and families reserving one while expecting the other are in for a shock!
That said, each Art of Animation room type–with some important qualifiers–comes in at the top of its respective class:
Little Mermaid standard rooms are the best place to stay for families seeking a standard value resort room.
(Families with mobility issues might want a preferred room at Pop Century instead, and families looking for queen beds a refurbed room at Pop Century, All-Star Movies, or All-Star Music. Those needing to spend the lowest amount possible should target All-Star Movies.)
The Family Suites at Disney’s Art of Animation Resort beat out the alternative value resort Family Suites at All-Star Music on most dimensions as the best suites for first-timers.
(There are a few differences at All-Star Music that make the family suites there better for some families. Music suites are undergoing a refurb that looks to be eliminating some of their flaws, but also some of their flexibility. Music suites are also much cheaper, averaging in 2020 about $160 less per night.)
Because of the importance of this resort and these rooms–coming in at the top of their respective rankings–you’ll find thousands of words and hundreds of pictures in the later pages of this review.
This page, by way of introduction, looks at the “big picture” of Art of Animation.
You can have a wonderful visit at any Walt Disney World resort hotel.
However, this site recommends that first time visitors to Walt Disney World who can afford it should stay at Disney’s Polynesian Resort, a deluxe resort, and that those who can’t should stay at Disney’s Art of Animation Resort, a value resort. (See this for more on the value resorts at Walt Disney World.)
(It also suggests that first time visitors should avoid the moderate resorts, while noting that these resorts are wonderful for visits after the first. See this for why.)
Compared to other Walt Disney World owned and operated resorts, the value resorts are distinguished by having the lowest prices, least amenities, and smallest standard rooms. In contrast, value resort Family Suites–predominant at Art of Animation–are quite large, and for some families may even be substitutes for a deluxe resort.
Note that the long-time travel agent partner of this site, Kelly B., can help you book your Disney World vacation at Art of Animation or anywhere else–contact her using the form at the bottom of this page.
STANDARD ROOMS AT ART OF ANIMATION
You likely will never stay in a hotel with smaller rooms than the standard rooms you’ll find at Disney’s value resorts.
See the floor plan of a standard Little Mermaid room at Art of Animation.
I could not imagine staying in one of these rooms if I had to add a crib as well (the room sleeps four in two full-size beds, plus one more, younger than three, in a crib).
However, if your family will fit, standard rooms in Disney’s Art of Animation Resort have much more kid appeal than the moderate resorts, the next higher price class.
(Moderates on average are only a little more expensive than Little Mermaid rooms, and are particularly comparably priced in the summer and over holidays. But moderates have much bigger standard rooms, queen beds–other than a few exceptions–and nicer landscaping. See this for much more on resort distinctions by price class–value, moderate, deluxe, etc.)
Compared to staying off-site, the value resorts are distinguished by their higher kid appeal, convenience, and access to certain key perks that off-site hotels can’t provide.
Art of Animation has ten buildings, deeply themed in groups of two or three buildings around a well-loved Disney movie.
Standard rooms at Art of Animation all have a Little Mermaid theme. There are no Standard rooms in the Cars, Nemo, or Lion King areas, and no family suites in the Little Mermaid area.
The main problem with the Little Mermaid standard rooms at Art of Animation (besides their price) is their relative distance from the central resort services–the bus stop, Disney Skyliner gondola station, food court, check-in desks, and main pool.
Art of Animation was built on a site planned for an expansion of Pop Century. As part of that expansion the foundations, the central service building, and two of the ten hotel buildings were built a decade ago.
The two already-built buildings, along with a third planned for the same themed area, were converted into the standard room area of Art of Animation.
The other seven buildings–to become Family Suites–are on the same footprint, but profoundly different.
By chance, the two already-built buildings also happened to be part of the grouping that is furthest away from the main central services.
See the resort map above. The Little Mermaid Rooms are in the orange circle on the left. None of these buildings is either wildly distant nor particularly convenient, but families with mobility issues (or needing queen beds) should consider a preferred room at Pop Century or All-Star Movies.
Among the Little Mermaid buildings, Building 7 is the best choice (one of the two closer buildings, and the only one of these two with rooms with a lake view), and building 8 the worst (the farthest).
FAMILY SUITES AT ART OF ANIMATION
The Family Suites at Art of Animation combine innovative and flexible floor plans with deep theming based on the Disney movies Cars, the Lion King, and Finding Nemo that makes them uniquely attractive for larger families.
(These rooms are undergoing a minor refurb that is replacing the carpets with wood-laminate floors. I’ll have updated images later.)
See the floor plan.
These rooms sleep six in a space more than twice as big as the 4-person standard Little Mermaid rooms.
There are three sleeping spots–two in the queen in the master bedroom, two on a fold-out couch in the living space, and two on a Murphy bed that folds down where the dining table shows on the floor plan.
The number of beds (3 vs 4) and the dining table are the main furnishings differences between Art of Animation Family Suites and those at All-Star Music, although a refurb in All-Star Music appears to be shifting it to three beds.
Folding the bed down to make the dining table disappear is also just fun.
These rooms are also much more deeply themed than those at Music–to an extent that may be garish to some families! The new simpler floors that are emerging in these rooms will help tone them down a bit.
All-Star Music Family Suites also have some other positives–a bigger living room and kitchen, four sleeping spots rather than three, and a much lower price.
But for most families, Art of Animation Family Suites will be the better choice. They have much more kid appeal, and more convenience, than those at Music.
Choices as to which group of buildings to book will, in many families, simply be guided by which of Cars, the Lion King, and Finding Nemo is their favorite film. (The Nemo rooms are a little more expensive.)
For those open to any of the three, a 2nd floor or higher Hourglass Lake view room on the Finding Nemo side of Building 6 in the Lion King area will be the best choice.
- You’d pick the Lion King buildings because these are the only ones at Art of Animation that don’t surround a pool. This makes them quieter.
- Second floor or higher to limit corridor noise, which in the Family Suite buildings can be a problem on the first floor.
- Hourglass Lake view, and thus Building 6, because this is the best view (Art of Animation and Pop Century are the only value resorts on a lake; why not take advantage of that view?).
- And the Finding Nemo side of Building 6 as that will put you closer to the central services of the resort.
Note that, with one exception, when you book your room you get to pick which themed area you will be in–the exception is if you book a family suite on a deal. For more specific requests, put in a room request.
WHY IS ART OF ANIMATION RANKED SO HIGH?
Resorts are ranked on this site for first time family visitors based first on their kid appeal, and then on their convenience. Art of Animation has the most kid appeal of all the values, and as much convenience as any.
This makes Art of Animation my highest-ranked value resort at Walt Disney World.
KID APPEAL AND ART OF ANIMATION
Several of the deluxe resorts–notably, the Wilderness Lodge, Animal Kingdom Lodge, and Polynesian Resort–have spectacular kid appeal. None of the moderates do.
All of the value resorts–Disney’s Art of Animation resort, Disney’s All-Star Sports, All-Star Music, and All-Star Movies, and its Pop Century resort–have terrific kid appeal.
This appeal comes from the approach to theming they all share: bright and vibrant exteriors, framing much larger than life objects of interest to kids.
These objects reinforce that these resorts were designed for the sake of kids…and not necessarily for adults!
Art of Animation takes this theming to a new level of immersiveness. Its four areas each have two or three buildings themed around a movie with great kid appeal–Cars, Little Mermaid, the Lion King, and Finding Nemo.
The rooms are more deeply themed to their respective movies than the rooms in any other value resort are themed to their topics.
See the view of the Cars Family Suite above, for example, and the detail of its theme.
Even more astonishing is the theming outside the rooms.
The environments around the Art of Animation buildings are deeply themed to recall the settings of these movies.
This is particularly effective in the Cars (above) and Lion King (below) areas, and least so in the Little Mermaid section.
The Cars and Lion King areas are in fact so deeply themed to their settings that the areas around them may be a little off-putting to those who are not fans of these films.
CONVENIENCE AND ART OF ANIMATION
Disney’s Art of Animation Resort is more convenient than the All-Stars, and mostly as convenient as Pop Century.
Compared to the All-Stars, it is more central. Although Disney officially classifies it, like the All-Stars, as an “ESPN Wide World of Sports” Area Resort,” it is in fact quite centrally located.
- It is just south of Disney’s Caribbean Beach Resort, nestled in the area between Epcot and Disney’s Hollywood Studios.
- It is closer to Epcot, Disney’s Hollywood Studios, and the Magic Kingdom than the All-Stars are.
Second, Art of Animation is one of only two resorts at Walt Disney World that both has only one bus stop and also does not share buses with any other resort. (Pop Century is the other.)
Each of the All-Star resorts has only one bus stop, but they often share their buses with one or both of the other All-Stars.
Moreover, Art of Animation is now linked by the new Disney World Skyliner gondola system to Epcot and Disney’s Hollywood Studios.
It shares a Skyliner station with Pop Century, on the bridge connecting the two resorts over Hourglass Lake. From this station, you ride to the main hub, at Caribbean Beach, and re-board there for either the Epcot or Hollywood Studios lines.
Pop Century is a little easier to get around for than Art of Animation is for those in standard rooms. The standard rooms at Art of Animation are more distant from the hotel’s central services than 70% of Pop’s are.
Compared to the other value resorts, Art of Animations’ strengths are its unmatched kid appeal from its great theming, transportation convenience at the highest level of the values, its vast number of really well-designed Family Suites, and the best food court on any Disney World resort hotel property.
The only weaknesses it has compared to other values are its high prices, and the fact that its 4 person standard rooms (all in its Little Mermaid section) are less convenient to the hotel’s central services than most of those at any other value, and that all of its standard rooms still have full beds and no coffeemaker. Refurbed Pop Century, All-Star Movies, and All-Star Music rooms have queen beds and coffeemakers.
The long-time travel agent partner of this site, Kelly B., can help you book your Disney World vacation at Art of Animation or anywhere else–contact her using the form below.
LITTLE MERMAID STANDARD ROOMS AT ART OF ANIMATION
This review continues here.
MATERIAL IN THIS REVIEW OF DISNEY’S ART OF ANIMATION RESORT
- Overview of Disney’s Art of Animation Resort
- The Little Mermaid Area and Rooms
- Photo Tour of a Little Mermaid Room
- Overview of the Family Suites Areas
- Accommodations in the Family Suites
- Photo Tour of a Finding Nemo Family Suite (plus bed dimensions, storage, etc)
- Photo Tour of a Lion King Family Suite
- Photo Tour of a Cars Family Suite
- Amenities at Disney’s Art of Animation Resort
- The Pools at Disney’s Art of Animation Resort
OTHER KEY PAGES FOR WHERE TO STAY AT DISNEY WORLD
- Where to stay–the Basics
- Where first-timers should stay
- Reviews of all the Disney World resorts, based on my 150+ stays in them
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