Category — q. Reviews
Review: Loews Royal Pacific Resort at Universal Orlando
HOTELS FOR THE WIZARDING WORLD OF HARRY POTTER
This site’s Instructions for the Wizarding World of Harry Potter suggest that families wishing to visit Harry Potter that can afford it book a room at Loews Royal Pacific Resort.
This is because the Universal resorts (the Royal Pacific, Portofino Bay, and Hard Rock) give terrific perks at Universal Orlando to hotel guests.
Most relevant to Harry Potter is that the Wizarding World opens to guests of these hotels one hour before it opens to the general public. (If you are staying just one night, this is true both your day of check-in and your day of check-out.)
This makes it particularly easy to fit in both Ollivanders and Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey without hours of waiting.
Another great perk is that Universal hotel guests can use their room key as the equivalent of a FASTPASS for many rides at any time. This does not currently apply to the Forbidden Journey or Ollivanders--the only perk that applies to them is the early entry.
All three hotels are nice, convenient to both parks at Universal Orlando, and expensive.
- Portofino Bay is the most expensive and gorgeous, but its theme will go over the head of most kids
- Hard Rock Hotel is the next most expensive, and appealing to older kids who like music
- The Royal Pacific is the least expensive of the three, and its Indonesian/South Seas theming is the most accessible of the three to younger kids.
For most families, the Royal Pacific will be the best choice. [Read more →]
July 12, 2011 6 Comments
Review: Disney’s Contemporary Resort, p3
This is the third page of this review. For the first page click here, and for the second, click here.
THE THEMING OF DISNEY’S CONTEMPORARY RESORT
Disney’s Contemporary Resort opened in October 1971, and its last–very nice–renovation was completed in 2007. It is officially described on Walt Disney World’s website as
“…an ultra-modern Disney Deluxe Resort, made up of a towering A-frame high-rise building—the iconic Contemporary Tower—and complemented by one garden wing annex. This lakeside Resort is the only hotel in Walt Disney World Resort to have the Walt Disney World Monorail System pass through the main lobby.”
The Contemporary Resort was designed collaboratively by the US Steel Corporation, Disney, and the under-rated Welton Becket, friend and neighbor of Walt Disney. (This same group also designed the Polynesian.)
Becket is under-rated not as an architect, but rather because, in a sense, he created Imagineering.
According to John Hench, when Disney was looking for help is designing Disneyland, “Becket said [to Walt Disney] ‘You’ve got to use your own people. We can’t help you. We don’t have any kind of a background for this. Just use your own guys.'”
As a result, Walt Disney started bringing artists and craftspeople over from his and other studios to work on the park, and Imagineering was born.
(Quoted in Jeff Kurtti’s Walt Disney’s Imagineering Legends and the Genesis of the Disney Theme Park.)
The original concepts for the Contemporary were that it was to be a high rise, and that the monorail was to run through it.
This led to the internal atrium, and to the length of the building, which was designed to shelter two monorail trains on each track in case of hurricanes.
(Hurricane doors are at either end of the atrium, where the monorail tracks enter.)
At some point the total number of rooms were defined–I’ve seen no source on why the particular number was picked–and the design result was the long, monolithic, and dull facade that we’ve known ever since.
Although the building has no kid appeal other than the monorail itself, a family that stayed only there, and never saw one of the value resorts, or the Polynesian, Wilderness Lodge, or Animal Kingdom Lodge, could be forgiven for thinking they were staying in the perfect Walt Disney World hotel!
It has two of Disney World’s signature restaurants.
On the rooftop is the California Grill, almost as iconic as the Contemporary itself.
Joe Fowler notes (quoted in Didier Ghez’s section of Chad Emerson’s Four Decades of Magic: Celebrating the First Forty Years of Disney World) that Walt Disney asked to see how Disney World would look from the California Grill (then with a different name) location.
“So we got the biggest damned utility crane in Florida…and they hoisted us straight up to where the lounge at the top of the Contemporary would be…he was so enthusiastic: ‘Oh Joe look at this! This is going to be great!'”
Walt was right…not just about Disney World, but also the view from what would later become the California Grill.
At the monorail level is Chef Mickey’s, one of the most-loved character meals at all of Walt Disney World.
The Wave, on the ground floor level, is another sit-down restaurant with its fans.
The main dining options are completed by the Contempo Cafe, the Contemporary’s great counter-service option.
Other dining options are easily accessible via the monorail to the Grand Floridian and Polynesian, and boats to Fort Wilderness Resort and the Wilderness Lodge.
The Contemporary has a fine, though uninteresting, pool, accompanied with a pool snack bar and a pool bar–though these (especially the bar!) closed too early on my May visit.
In addition to the main pool, there’s also a smaller circular pool more attended by adults, and a great kid water play area.
There’s also a large lovely beach–but, as at all other Disney resort beaches, no swimming is allowed (see the top of the page for a photo of the beach).
My annoying sister and I, in the 70s, came to this beach every year to work on our tans in between visits to the Magic Kingdom and to my grandparents on my dad’s side. (Happy Father’s Day, pop!)
The convenience of the Contemporary is hard to beat…being able to walk to and from the Magic Kingdom is quite a luxury.
All in, though, the comparative lack of kid appeal puts it fourth among the deluxe resorts for first-time visitors. It is well worth a visit by returning visitors!
While the Contemporary served as Disney World’s flagship resort until the Grand Floridian opened in 1988, such was not Disney’s original intention.
In its pre-opening master plan, the never-built Venetian Resort (to be built between the Contemporary and the TTC) was to become the resort’s flagship hotel.
Also planned but never built were the Asian Resort, planned for the current site of the Grand Floridian, and the Persian Resort, to have been built on Bay Lake, between the Contemporary and Tomorrowland.
The Venetian site was revisited in the 90s for the Mediterranean Resort, but the site was found to be too expensive to build on at that time.
Another planned early resort was Buffalo Junction, to have been built between Fort Wilderness Resort and the Wilderness Lodge. Rumors emerged last year of this site as a potential Disney Vacation Club resort location.
Disney World’s master planning is influenced (though not shaped, it’s a long story, see this, though there are some lies in it…) by the Reedy Creek Improvement District’s long term plan.
The latest version, a 2020 plan released in 2008, includes all of these spots as potentially buildable.
Land suitable for further development is marked on the map in red; marginally suitable land is in light yellow-green. (Unsuitable land is in dark green.)
So maybe we’ll see more Magic Kingdom deluxe resorts one of these days…
PAGES: First | 1 | 2 | 3 | Last
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
June 20, 2011 No Comments
Review: The Haunted Mansion at the Magic Kingdom
THE HAUNTED MANSION
I review rides only when they are new or after they have changed, on the theory that first time visitors ought to try them all and hence don’t need reviews.
(For those without the time or energy to try them all, there’s a
comprehensive guide to Disney World rides and attractions here and also a list of Disney World rides that might be skipped here.)
The Haunted Mansion has had a couple of recent changes, to its queue and to some of the business of the ride at the end.
Some have objected to them–the queue enhancements in particular–for messing with the ride’s coherence.
That’s a stretch, as this ride has no coherence other than (mostly!) being set in and around a building.
The changes–to me at least–are fun, and make a great (incoherent) ride even better.
They also help further set the Magic Kingdom up for future FASTPASS changes related to Disney’s NextGen project.
June 15, 2011 No Comments
Review: Disney’s Contemporary Resort, Continued
For the first page of this review, click here.
MORE ON DISNEY’S CONTEMPORARY RESORT
There are currently 8 official Disney owned and operated deluxe resorts at Walt Disney World.
In their recommended order for first time family visitors, they are
Many of these also offer Disney Vacation Club (“DVC”) studios and villas, all for rent to the general public–see this for more on the Disney Vacation Club resorts.
For more on the Contemporary’s DVC offering, Bay Lake Tower, click here.
ROOMS AT DISNEY’S CONTEMPORARY RESORT
June 13, 2011 No Comments
Review: Pirates of the Caribbean at the Magic Kingdom
PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN
Long-time readers will know that I review rides only when they are new or after they have changed, on the theory that first-time visitors ought to try them all and hence don’t need reviews.
(For those without the time or energy to try them all, there’s a
comprehensive guide to Disney World rides and attractions and also a list of Disney World rides that might be skipped.)
Well, the venerable Pirates of the Caribbean ride at the Magic Kingdom had a recent change–Blackbeard was added to one of the ride elements! Not a big deal, but enough of an excuse for me to ride it again and publish a review!
Especially since minor changes at the Haunted Mansion and Splash Mountain also give me reasons for reviews of them, and these three rides are best thought of as variations on a theme–the theme being the picaresque. [Read more →]
June 8, 2011 No Comments
Review: Disney’s Contemporary Resort
OVERVIEW: DISNEY’S CONTEMPORARY RESORT
Our most recent stay confirms that Disney’s Contemporary Resort is the fourth best deluxe resort at Walt Disney World for first time family visitors.
June 6, 2011 2 Comments