For the first page of this review of Disney’s Beach Club Villas, see this.
THE THEMING OF DISNEY’S BEACH CLUB VILLAS
Disney’s Beach Club Villas opened in 2002 as the fourth on-site Disney Vacation Club resort.
According to Disney’s web page on the Beach Club Villas, they
“…wrap leisure, elegance and romance into a full-service New England-style Disney Deluxe Villa Resort…
…The nautical allure of the Eastern Seaboard comes alive with architecture that features intricate wooden accents and a soft pastel color palette. Retreat to one of our stately Studios with kitchenettes or one of our spacious Villas complete with a kitchen, living area and a host of home-style amenities. Enjoy charming views from your windows and private porch or balcony.”
Designed by the architect who did the rest of the Epcot resorts, Robert A.M. Stern, the Beach Club Villas share the charming “Stick” architecture of sister resort the Beach Club, but are even more graceful and lovely than the sister resort is.
The Beach Club Villas are in fact as lovely as any other resort at Walt Disney World, and are at least comparable in beauty to the Grand Floridian…and perhaps, because of their smaller scale, even more charming.
The smaller scale, angled facade, and more playful detailing of the Beach Club Villas help it better reflect its roots in domestic architecture.
For example, some of the facades include not only the clapboard siding common at the resort but also towers designed with board and batten siding.  A small thing, but one that hints at having a domestic history rather than being a monolith.
The Villas are a lovely sea green, a warmer and more inviting color than the (still-nice) cooler blue of the Beach Club.
Interiors spaces are just as nice, especially the main entry lobby through which guests will walk many times as they access the Beach Club, Epcot, Crescent Lake, and the BoardWalk.
The Beach Club Villas have many strengths for first time visitors, bringing together the positives of the DVC resorts–extra, more livable space, full kitchens–with those of the Beach Club: access to Stormalong Bay, Epcot and Disney’s Hollywood Studios.
The weaknesses of the Beach Club Villas are also shared–many families won’t be in these rooms enough to enjoy their amenities, and the architecture, lovely to adults, is dull to kids.
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MORE ON WHERE TO STAY AT DISNEY WORLD
- For where to stay, see this
- For your next best choices, in order, see this
- For picking your resort based on appeal to kids, see this
- For picking your resort based on convenience, see this
- For where not to stay, see this
- For what you get in each resort price category, see this
- For Walt Disney World resort price seasons, see this
- For resort reviews, see this
- For the value resorts, see this
- For the moderate resorts, see this
- For the deluxe resorts, see this
- For suites at the deluxe resorts, see this
- For the Disney Vacation Club (“DVC”) Resorts, see this
- For a (geeky) overview of comparative room size, see this
- Military/DOD families should look at this
- Families seeking the most comfortable place to stay should see this
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3 Comments on "Review: Disney’s Beach Club Villas, Page 6"
Thanks for your quick response, Dave!
Dawn I don’t discourage a ground floor room! Noise will be a little higher, but if you want to walk to the pool, go for it!
Thank you so much for this review! You recommended asking for a pool-view room on the second floor or higher in the wing that’s closest to the bus stop. I was thinking of requesting this area, but on the ground floor so that we could walk right out to the quiet pool. Would you discourage a room on the ground floor and, if so, why? Will there be a lot of traffic/noise in this area?