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Wikipedia

Disneyland Resort

The Disneyland Resort, commonly known as Disneyland, is an entertainment resort in Anaheim, California. It is owned and operated by The Walt Disney Company through its Parks, Experiences and Products division and is home to two theme parks (Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure), three hotels, and a shopping, dining, and entertainment district known as Downtown Disney.

Disneyland Resort
The Happiest Place on Earth
IndustryAmusement parks and resorts
FoundedJuly 17, 1955; 67 years ago (1955-07-17)
FounderWalt Disney
HeadquartersAnaheim, California, United States
Key people
Ken Potrock (President)
ParentDisney Parks, Experiences and Products
(The Walt Disney Company)
WebsiteOfficial website

The resort was developed by Walt Disney in the 1950s. When it opened to guests on July 17, 1955, the property consisted of Disneyland, its 100-acre parking lot (which had 15,167 spaces),[1] and the Disneyland Hotel, owned and operated by Disney's business partner Jack Wrather. After the success with the multi-park, multi-hotel business model at Walt Disney World in Lake Buena Vista, Florida, Disney acquired large parcels of land adjacent to Disneyland to apply the same business model in Anaheim.

During the expansion, the property was named the Disneyland Resort to encompass the entire complex, while the original theme park was named Disneyland Park. The company purchased the Disneyland Hotel from the Wrather Company and the Pan Pacific Hotel from the Tokyu Group. The Pan Pacific Hotel became Disney's Paradise Pier Hotel in 2000. In 2001 the property saw the addition of Disney's Grand Californian Hotel & Spa, a second theme park, named Disney California Adventure, and the Downtown Disney shopping, dining, and entertainment district.

History

Concept and construction

Walt Disney's early concepts for an amusement park called for a "Mickey Mouse Park" located adjacent to the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank (presently the site of the West Coast headquarters of ABC). As new ideas emerged, Walt and his brother Roy realized that the Burbank location would be too small for the project, and hired a consultant from Stanford Research Institute to provide them with information on locations and economic feasibility. The consultant recommended a remote location in Anaheim, adjacent to the then-under-construction Santa Ana Freeway. The consultant correctly predicted that the location – covered by orange groves at the time – would become the population center of Southern California. Since the location was far from Southern California population centers in the 1950s, Walt Disney wanted to build a hotel so that Disneyland visitors traveling long distances could stay overnight. However, the park had depleted his financial resources, so he negotiated a deal with Hollywood producer Jack Wrather in which he would build and operate a hotel called the Disneyland Hotel across the street from Disneyland.

In 1963, city planner James Rouse, in a commencement speech at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, called Disneyland “the greatest piece of urban design in the United States today."[2]

1955–1998: one park, one hotel

Disneyland opened on July 17, 1955, with a televised press preview event on ABC. Despite the disastrous event, later dubbed "Black Sunday", during which several rides broke down and other mishaps occurred, Disneyland became a huge success in its first year of operation. The hotel, which opened three months after the park, enjoyed similar success. Walt Disney wanted to build more facilities for Disneyland visitors to stay in Anaheim, but since his financial resources were drained, entrepreneurs established their own independent hotels in the area surrounding the park and hotel to capitalize on Disneyland's success.[3]

 
Topographical map of Disneyland from 1965

To Walt Disney's dismay, the city of Anaheim was lax in restricting their construction, eager for the tax revenue generated by more hotels in the city. The area surrounding Disneyland became suffused with the kind of tacky atmosphere of colorful lights, flashy neon signs, and then-popular Googie architecture which he had wanted to avoid (and which years earlier had caused the city of Burbank to deny his initial request to build his project in Burbank).[4] The Anaheim Convention Center was built across the street from Disneyland's original parking lot, and residences were constructed in the area as part of the city's growth in the late 20th century. Eventually, Disneyland was "boxed in", a factor which would later lead Walt Disney to acquire a significantly larger parcel of land for the construction of Walt Disney World. The Walt Disney Company gradually acquired the land west of the park, notably the Disneyland Hotel in 1988 following Jack Wrather's death in 1984, the Pan Pacific Hotel (now Disney's Paradise Pier Hotel) in 1995, and several properties north of the Disneyland Hotel in the mid to late 1990s.[citation needed]

1998–2001: planning an expansion

After Walt's and Roy's deaths in 1966 and 1971, respectively, the Walt Disney Company would go on to achieve success with the multi-park, multi-hotel resort complex business model of Walt Disney World in Florida, which opened in 1971. In the 1990s, Disney decided to turn Disneyland into a similar multi-park, multi-hotel resort destination. In 1991, Disney announced plans to build WestCOT, a theme park based on Walt Disney World's EPCOT Center, on the site of the original Disneyland parking lot.[5] Its estimated cost was US$3 billion, largely due to the cost of land that Disney would need to acquire. With the new Euro Disney Resort, which opened in 1992, becoming a financial and public relations albatross for the company, Disney was unable to finance the project, and cancelled WestCOT in 1995. That summer, Disney executives gathered in Aspen, Colorado for a 3-day retreat, where they came up with the idea for a California-themed park, dubbed Disney's California Adventure Park, to be built on the same site slated for WestCOT. $1.4 billion was budgeted to build the park, a retail district, and hotels.[5]

2001–present: Disneyland Resort complex

In January 2015, Tom Staggs, Disney Parks chair, and Steve Davison, VP of Park Entertainment, announced upcoming changes to the park to celebrate the park's 60th anniversary. The changes began on May 22, 2015, and ran for sixteen months.[6] The updates included an updated World of Color water show, Paint the Night parade, and a new fireworks show titled Disneyland Forever. Disney California Adventure also received a makeover, with Condor Flats remade into Grizzly Peak Airfield and Soarin' Over California equipped with a new laser projection system. Peter Pan's Flight reopened on July 1.

In October 2017, Disney announced a new Pixar Pals parking structure for the resort, which includes a 6,500-space parking structure, and a new transportation hub, which opened in July 2019.[7] The parking structure opened in June 2019 and is now used daily.

In August 2015, it was announced that Disneyland Park would receive a 14-acre Star Wars-themed land scheduled to open in 2019.[8] It opened on May 31, 2019. Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge is home of two attractions, Millennium Falcon – Smugglers Run, and Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance.

In March 2018, it was announced that A Bug's Land would close in September 2018. It was replaced by Avengers Campus which was set to open July 18, 2020, but was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic[9][10] and opened on June 4, 2021.[11]

In January 2021, officials announced that the resort will be the first "super" COVID-19 vaccination site in Orange County, California. As one of several "super POD" (Point-of-Dispensing) locations, it is expected that thousands of residents will be able to be vaccinated against COVID-19 each day.[12]

Future expansion and proposed DisneylandForward

Disney announced plans to build a fourth hotel at the resort in 2016, slated for an opening in 2021.[13] In August 2018, the hotel was placed on hold indefinitely because of a dispute with the city of Anaheim, which concerned a tax rebate that would have subsidized the hotel's construction.[14][15] Later, the hotel was cancelled as Disney and Anaheim could not come to an agreement on the tax rebate.

In April 2019, Disneyland announced that Mickey & Minnie's Runaway Railway would be coming to Disneyland in 2023. The attraction will go behind Mickey's Toontown in a former backstage area.[16]

In March 2021, the Walt Disney Company announced a new project for the Anaheim, California resort called Disneyland Forward. This proposal is designed to change the city of Anaheim's zoning rules so that Disney can build more theme park space for both Disneyland and Disney California Adventure. Proposals have included building more space where Disney's Paradise Pier hotel and the surrounding parking lots on the west-side of the resort currently reside. Rumors have surfaced that a new version of a mixed-use Disney Springs would be built near the Toy Story parking lot.[17]

Location

 
Map of Disneyland Resort in 2012

The Disneyland Resort is located several miles south of downtown Anaheim, in an area branded by the city as the Anaheim Resort near the border of neighboring Garden Grove. The resort is generally bounded by Harbor Boulevard to the east, Katella Avenue to the south, Walnut Street to the west and Ball Road to the north. Interstate 5 borders the resort at an angle on the northeastern corner.

Not all land bordered by these streets is part of the Disneyland Resort, particularly near the intersection of Harbor Boulevard and Katella Avenue, and along Ball Road between Disneyland Drive and Walnut Street. Disneyland Drive cuts through the resort on a north–south route and provides access to the Mickey & Friends Parking Structure, Downtown Disney, and the three hotels. Magic Way connects Walnut Street to Disneyland Drive just south of the Mickey & Friends Parking Structure and provides access to the parking structure, Disneyland Hotel, and Downtown Disney.

Special offramps from Interstate 5 combined with a reversible flyover over the intersection of Ball Road and Disneyland Drive permit access into and out of the Mickey & Friends parking garage during peak morning and evening traffic times. The official address of the resort is 1313 South Harbor Boulevard; the address number is a Hidden Mickey.[18]

Attractions

Parks

Shopping, Dining, and Entertainment

  • Downtown Disney, an outdoor retail, dining, and entertainment district located between the entrance promenade of the Disneyland Resort theme parks and the Disneyland Hotel.

Hotels

  • Disneyland Hotel, the resort's original hotel built by Jack Wrather which opened on October 5, 1955, and was purchased by Disney in 1988.
  • Disney's Paradise Pier Hotel, a hotel themed after the section of Disney California Adventure it overlooks. Formerly operated by the Tokyu Group (opening in 1984 under the name Emerald of Anaheim),[19] the hotel was purchased by Disney in December 1995, for a reported US$36 million, and renamed the Disneyland Pacific Hotel.[20] As part of the 1998-2001 expansion of the resort, it was re-branded as Disney's Paradise Pier Hotel.[21] The lobby and convention/banquet facilities have undergone several renovations since the re-branding, most notably in 2004 and 2005. On April 27, 2022, Disney announced that the hotel will be re-themed to the artwork of Pixar Animation Studios.[22] On September 11, 2022, it was announced that the name would be the Pixar Place Hotel.
  • Disney's Grand Californian Hotel & Spa, based on the Craftsman style of architecture of the early 1900s, which opened on January 2, 2001.

Attendance

The 2019 issue of "TEA/AECOM 2018 Theme Index and Museum Index: The Global Attractions Attendance Report" reported the following attendance estimates for 2018 compiled by the Themed Entertainment Association:

  • Disneyland: 18,666,000 visits (No. 2 worldwide/in the US, up 2% from 2017)[23]
  • Disney's California Adventure: 9,861,000 visits (No. 11 worldwide/No. 7 in the US, up 3% from 2017)[23]

Ticket prices

Approximately 60,000 people visited the park on Disneyland's opening day, July 17, 1955,[24] when park admission was priced at $1 for adults and $0.50 for children. This did not include access to rides and other individual attractions; attraction tickets could be purchased separately for $0.10 to $0.35.[25] Single attraction tickets were permanently eliminated in June 1982;[25] access to all the park's attractions was henceforth included in the price of park admission tickets.

Admission prices have greatly increased since the gates first opened, due in part to inflation, the continuing construction and renovation of attractions, and the addition of a second theme park, Disney California Adventure. As of 17 January 2020, one-day "Park Hopper" tickets, allowing entry to both Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure, are priced between $154 (on "Value" days) & $199 (on "Peak" days) for adults, and between $148 ("Value") & $191 ("Peak") for children.[26] Visitors can also purchase one-park tickets and multi-day tickets.

In addition to daily tickets, in 1984 the Premium Annual Passport was introduced to the public. The Premium Annual Passport granted daily entry for a year at a time for $65 for adults and $49 for children. There were five different types of Annual Passports available for purchase, which are the Disney Signature Plus Passport ($1,449), the Disney Signature Passport ($1,199), the Disney Deluxe Passport ($829), the Disney Flex Passport ($649), and the Disney Southern California Select Passport ($399).[27]

On January 14, 2021, Disneyland announced that they would be canceling the annual passport program.[28] Disneyland Resort president Ken Potrock stated, "Due to the continued uncertainty of the pandemic and limitations around the reopening of our California theme parks, we will be issuing appropriate refunds for eligible Disneyland resort Annual Passports and sunsetting the current program."[29] A replacement program was announced on August 3, 2021, titled "Magic Keys."[30] There are four different tiers of Magic Keys available: Dream Key ($1,339), Believe Key ($949), Enchant Key ($649), and Imagine Key ($399).[31]

Management

Executives

The president of Disneyland Resort is Ken Potrock. Potrock reports to Josh D'Amaro, Chairman of Parks, Experiences and Consumer Products.

Current management

  • President, Disneyland Resort – Ken Potrock
    • Senior Vice President, Operations – Patrick Finnegan
    • Vice President, Disneyland Park – Kris Thieler
    • Vice President, Disneyland Resort Hotels & Aulani, a Disney Resort & Spa – Elliot Mills

Past management:

  • President, Disneyland Resort – Rebecca Campbell (2019–2020)
  • President, Disneyland Resort – Josh D'Amaro (2018–2019)
  • President, Disneyland Resort – Michael Colglazier (2013–2018)
  • President, Disneyland Resort – George Kalogridis (2009–2013)
  • President, Disneyland Resort – Ed Grier (2006–2009)
  • President, Disneyland Resort – Matt Ouimet (2003–2006)
  • President, Disneyland Resort – Cynthia Harriss (1999–2003)
  • President, Disneyland Resort – Paul Pressler (1994–1999; Chairman of Walt Disney Parks and Resorts, 1999–2002)
  • President, Disneyland Resort – Jack Lindquist (1990–1994)
    • Former Vice President, Downtown Disney and Disneyland Resort Hotels 1998–2012 – Tony Bruno
  • Former Executive Vice President – Dick Nunis (1972–1980)

Operations

The day-to-day operations of the resort are overseen by a hierarchy of operations managers or "stage managers", who change with each shift. They are colloquially known by their radio call signs, which usually contain the manager's department name (e.g., "Merch", "Foods") and an identifying number. Usually "One" denotes the manager in charge of that department for Disneyland Park, "Two" denotes the same for Disney California Adventure, "Three" denotes the same for the resort hotels, and "Four" denotes the same for Downtown Disney.

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Disneyland parking lot". Yesterland.
  2. ^ Serratore, Angela (2019-07-17). "The beauty of the Disney beast". Curbed. Retrieved 2022-11-14.
  3. ^ "Hotels near Disneyland | Anaheim Hotels | Disneyland Resort". disneyland.disney.go.com. Retrieved 2017-06-06.
  4. ^ . Anaheim.net. Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2012-03-28.
  5. ^ a b Marr, Merissa (2007-10-17). "Disney's $1 Billion Adventure". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2009-10-23.
  6. ^ Glover, Erin (March 11, 2015). "24-Hour Event to Launch Disneyland Resort Diamond Celebration, May 22–23". Disney Parks Blog. Disney. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  7. ^ Glover, Erin (October 25, 2017). "Parking and Transportation Improvements Coming to the Disneyland Resort". Disney Parks Blog. Retrieved October 25, 2017.
  8. ^ Glover, Erin (August 15, 2015). "Star Wars-Themed Lands Coming to Walt Disney World and Disneyland Resorts". Disney Parks Blog. Retrieved September 17, 2015.
  9. ^ @Disneyland (March 11, 2020). "Introducing Avengers Campus, an all-new land opening July 18 at Disney California Adventure Park. A Super Hero training complex for the next generation of heroes…just like you. #LetsGoBeHeroes" (Tweet). Retrieved March 11, 2020 – via Twitter.
  10. ^ "Avengers and Other Super Heroes to Assemble in New Themed Areas at Disneyland Resort, Disneyland Paris and Hong Kong Disneyland". Disney Parks Blog.
  11. ^ "Here's how to get in Disneyland's Avengers Campus without waiting in a 4-hour line". MSN. June 13, 2021. Retrieved June 14, 2021.
  12. ^ Christina Maxouris. "California's Disneyland Resort will host a 'super' Covid-19 vaccination site". CNN. Retrieved 2021-01-12.
  13. ^ Pimentel, Joseph (June 7, 2016). "Disneyland Resort plans another luxury hotel". The Orange County Register. Retrieved December 29, 2016.
  14. ^ Martin, Hugo (2018-08-16). "Disney promised a luxury hotel and Anaheim offered $267 million in tax breaks - but a growing feud has plans on hold". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
  15. ^ "What's next for Downtown Disney, now that the hotel project is on hold? – Orange County Register". Orange County Register. 2018-08-16. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
  16. ^ "Mickey & Minnie's Runaway Railway to Roll into Disneyland Park". Disney Parks Blog. Retrieved 2019-05-06.
  17. ^ "New plan at Disneyland calls for squeezing in more rides, restaurants and shops". Los Angeles Times. 2021-03-25. Retrieved 2022-01-26.
  18. ^ Barrett, Steven (2015). Disneyland's Hidden Mickeys: A Field Guide to Disneyland Resort's Best Kept Secrets. Intrepid Traveler.
  19. ^ Galante, Mary Ann (25 May 1989). "Tourism/leisure Time". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 27 August 2016.
  20. ^ Vrana, Debora (12 December 1995). "Disney Acquires Pan Pacific Hotel in Anaheim". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2 April 2010.
  21. ^ Sehlinger, Bob; Kubersky, Seth; Testa, Len (2013). The Unofficial Guide to Disneyland 2013. Wiley. p. 42. ISBN 978-1-118-27759-1.
  22. ^ "Disneyland plans Pixar hotel makeover of Paradise Pier Hotel". MSN. April 28, 2022. Retrieved April 28, 2022.
  23. ^ a b "TEA/AECOM 2018 Global Attractions Attendance Report" (PDF). TEAConnect.org. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  24. ^ "Disneyland Attendance Info - The Disneyland Linkage". Retrieved May 11, 2015.
  25. ^ a b . Archived from the original on May 18, 2015.
  26. ^ "Theme Park Tickets – Disneyland Resort". Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  27. ^ "Annual Passports – Disneyland Resort". Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  28. ^ MacDonald, Brady (14 January 2021). "Disneyland cancels annual passholder program". Orange County Register.
  29. ^ Chidbachian, Alexi (14 January 2021). "Disneyland Resort to end annual pass program". FOX 11 Los Angeles.
  30. ^ Bloom, Tracy (3 August 2021). "Disneyland launches 'Magic Key': What to know about the new annual pass replacement program". KTLA 5 - Los Angeles.
  31. ^ MacDonald, Brady (3 August 2021). "Disneyland Magic Key replaces annual passholder program". Orange County Register.

External links

  • Official website  
  •   Disneyland Resort travel guide from Wikivoyage

Coordinates: 33°48′33″N 117°55′08″W / 33.8091°N 117.9190°W / 33.8091; -117.9190

disneyland, resort, this, article, about, california, other, disney, parks, resorts, located, internationally, disneyland, disambiguation, commonly, known, disneyland, entertainment, resort, anaheim, california, owned, operated, walt, disney, company, through,. This article is about the Disneyland Resort in California For the other Disney parks and resorts located internationally see Disneyland disambiguation The Disneyland Resort commonly known as Disneyland is an entertainment resort in Anaheim California It is owned and operated by The Walt Disney Company through its Parks Experiences and Products division and is home to two theme parks Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure three hotels and a shopping dining and entertainment district known as Downtown Disney Disneyland ResortThe Happiest Place on EarthSleeping Beauty Castle in 2019 icon of Disneyland ParkIndustryAmusement parks and resortsFoundedJuly 17 1955 67 years ago 1955 07 17 FounderWalt DisneyHeadquartersAnaheim California United StatesKey peopleKen Potrock President ParentDisney Parks Experiences and Products The Walt Disney Company WebsiteOfficial websiteThe resort was developed by Walt Disney in the 1950s When it opened to guests on July 17 1955 the property consisted of Disneyland its 100 acre parking lot which had 15 167 spaces 1 and the Disneyland Hotel owned and operated by Disney s business partner Jack Wrather After the success with the multi park multi hotel business model at Walt Disney World in Lake Buena Vista Florida Disney acquired large parcels of land adjacent to Disneyland to apply the same business model in Anaheim During the expansion the property was named the Disneyland Resort to encompass the entire complex while the original theme park was named Disneyland Park The company purchased the Disneyland Hotel from the Wrather Company and the Pan Pacific Hotel from the Tokyu Group The Pan Pacific Hotel became Disney s Paradise Pier Hotel in 2000 In 2001 the property saw the addition of Disney s Grand Californian Hotel amp Spa a second theme park named Disney California Adventure and the Downtown Disney shopping dining and entertainment district Contents 1 History 1 1 Concept and construction 1 2 1955 1998 one park one hotel 1 3 1998 2001 planning an expansion 1 4 2001 present Disneyland Resort complex 1 5 Future expansion and proposed DisneylandForward 2 Location 3 Attractions 3 1 Parks 3 2 Shopping Dining and Entertainment 3 3 Hotels 4 Attendance 5 Ticket prices 6 Management 6 1 Executives 6 2 Operations 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditConcept and construction Edit See also Disneyland History This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Walt Disney s early concepts for an amusement park called for a Mickey Mouse Park located adjacent to the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank presently the site of the West Coast headquarters of ABC As new ideas emerged Walt and his brother Roy realized that the Burbank location would be too small for the project and hired a consultant from Stanford Research Institute to provide them with information on locations and economic feasibility The consultant recommended a remote location in Anaheim adjacent to the then under construction Santa Ana Freeway The consultant correctly predicted that the location covered by orange groves at the time would become the population center of Southern California Since the location was far from Southern California population centers in the 1950s Walt Disney wanted to build a hotel so that Disneyland visitors traveling long distances could stay overnight However the park had depleted his financial resources so he negotiated a deal with Hollywood producer Jack Wrather in which he would build and operate a hotel called the Disneyland Hotel across the street from Disneyland In 1963 city planner James Rouse in a commencement speech at the Harvard Graduate School of Design called Disneyland the greatest piece of urban design in the United States today 2 1955 1998 one park one hotel Edit Disneyland opened on July 17 1955 with a televised press preview event on ABC Despite the disastrous event later dubbed Black Sunday during which several rides broke down and other mishaps occurred Disneyland became a huge success in its first year of operation The hotel which opened three months after the park enjoyed similar success Walt Disney wanted to build more facilities for Disneyland visitors to stay in Anaheim but since his financial resources were drained entrepreneurs established their own independent hotels in the area surrounding the park and hotel to capitalize on Disneyland s success 3 Topographical map of Disneyland from 1965 To Walt Disney s dismay the city of Anaheim was lax in restricting their construction eager for the tax revenue generated by more hotels in the city The area surrounding Disneyland became suffused with the kind of tacky atmosphere of colorful lights flashy neon signs and then popular Googie architecture which he had wanted to avoid and which years earlier had caused the city of Burbank to deny his initial request to build his project in Burbank 4 The Anaheim Convention Center was built across the street from Disneyland s original parking lot and residences were constructed in the area as part of the city s growth in the late 20th century Eventually Disneyland was boxed in a factor which would later lead Walt Disney to acquire a significantly larger parcel of land for the construction of Walt Disney World The Walt Disney Company gradually acquired the land west of the park notably the Disneyland Hotel in 1988 following Jack Wrather s death in 1984 the Pan Pacific Hotel now Disney s Paradise Pier Hotel in 1995 and several properties north of the Disneyland Hotel in the mid to late 1990s citation needed 1998 2001 planning an expansion Edit After Walt s and Roy s deaths in 1966 and 1971 respectively the Walt Disney Company would go on to achieve success with the multi park multi hotel resort complex business model of Walt Disney World in Florida which opened in 1971 In the 1990s Disney decided to turn Disneyland into a similar multi park multi hotel resort destination In 1991 Disney announced plans to build WestCOT a theme park based on Walt Disney World s EPCOT Center on the site of the original Disneyland parking lot 5 Its estimated cost was US 3 billion largely due to the cost of land that Disney would need to acquire With the new Euro Disney Resort which opened in 1992 becoming a financial and public relations albatross for the company Disney was unable to finance the project and cancelled WestCOT in 1995 That summer Disney executives gathered in Aspen Colorado for a 3 day retreat where they came up with the idea for a California themed park dubbed Disney s California Adventure Park to be built on the same site slated for WestCOT 1 4 billion was budgeted to build the park a retail district and hotels 5 2001 present Disneyland Resort complex Edit Grizzly Peak at Disney California Adventure In January 2015 Tom Staggs Disney Parks chair and Steve Davison VP of Park Entertainment announced upcoming changes to the park to celebrate the park s 60th anniversary The changes began on May 22 2015 and ran for sixteen months 6 The updates included an updated World of Color water show Paint the Night parade and a new fireworks show titled Disneyland Forever Disney California Adventure also received a makeover with Condor Flats remade into Grizzly Peak Airfield and Soarin Over California equipped with a new laser projection system Peter Pan s Flight reopened on July 1 In October 2017 Disney announced a new Pixar Pals parking structure for the resort which includes a 6 500 space parking structure and a new transportation hub which opened in July 2019 7 The parking structure opened in June 2019 and is now used daily In August 2015 it was announced that Disneyland Park would receive a 14 acre Star Wars themed land scheduled to open in 2019 8 It opened on May 31 2019 Star Wars Galaxy s Edge is home of two attractions Millennium Falcon Smugglers Run and Star Wars Rise of the Resistance In March 2018 it was announced that A Bug s Land would close in September 2018 It was replaced by Avengers Campus which was set to open July 18 2020 but was delayed due to the COVID 19 pandemic 9 10 and opened on June 4 2021 11 In January 2021 officials announced that the resort will be the first super COVID 19 vaccination site in Orange County California As one of several super POD Point of Dispensing locations it is expected that thousands of residents will be able to be vaccinated against COVID 19 each day 12 Future expansion and proposed DisneylandForward Edit Disney announced plans to build a fourth hotel at the resort in 2016 slated for an opening in 2021 13 In August 2018 the hotel was placed on hold indefinitely because of a dispute with the city of Anaheim which concerned a tax rebate that would have subsidized the hotel s construction 14 15 Later the hotel was cancelled as Disney and Anaheim could not come to an agreement on the tax rebate In April 2019 Disneyland announced that Mickey amp Minnie s Runaway Railway would be coming to Disneyland in 2023 The attraction will go behind Mickey s Toontown in a former backstage area 16 In March 2021 the Walt Disney Company announced a new project for the Anaheim California resort called Disneyland Forward This proposal is designed to change the city of Anaheim s zoning rules so that Disney can build more theme park space for both Disneyland and Disney California Adventure Proposals have included building more space where Disney s Paradise Pier hotel and the surrounding parking lots on the west side of the resort currently reside Rumors have surfaced that a new version of a mixed use Disney Springs would be built near the Toy Story parking lot 17 Location Edit Map of Disneyland Resort in 2012 The Disneyland Resort is located several miles south of downtown Anaheim in an area branded by the city as the Anaheim Resort near the border of neighboring Garden Grove The resort is generally bounded by Harbor Boulevard to the east Katella Avenue to the south Walnut Street to the west and Ball Road to the north Interstate 5 borders the resort at an angle on the northeastern corner Not all land bordered by these streets is part of the Disneyland Resort particularly near the intersection of Harbor Boulevard and Katella Avenue and along Ball Road between Disneyland Drive and Walnut Street Disneyland Drive cuts through the resort on a north south route and provides access to the Mickey amp Friends Parking Structure Downtown Disney and the three hotels Magic Way connects Walnut Street to Disneyland Drive just south of the Mickey amp Friends Parking Structure and provides access to the parking structure Disneyland Hotel and Downtown Disney Special offramps from Interstate 5 combined with a reversible flyover over the intersection of Ball Road and Disneyland Drive permit access into and out of the Mickey amp Friends parking garage during peak morning and evening traffic times The official address of the resort is 1313 South Harbor Boulevard the address number is a Hidden Mickey 18 Attractions EditThis section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available February 2016 Parks Edit Disneyland Park the original theme park built by Walt Disney which opened on July 17 1955 Disney California Adventure Park a theme park based on the history and culture of California which opened on February 8 2001 Shopping Dining and Entertainment Edit Downtown Disney an outdoor retail dining and entertainment district located between the entrance promenade of the Disneyland Resort theme parks and the Disneyland Hotel Hotels Edit Disneyland Hotel the resort s original hotel built by Jack Wrather which opened on October 5 1955 and was purchased by Disney in 1988 Disney s Paradise Pier Hotel a hotel themed after the section of Disney California Adventure it overlooks Formerly operated by the Tokyu Group opening in 1984 under the name Emerald of Anaheim 19 the hotel was purchased by Disney in December 1995 for a reported US 36 million and renamed the Disneyland Pacific Hotel 20 As part of the 1998 2001 expansion of the resort it was re branded as Disney s Paradise Pier Hotel 21 The lobby and convention banquet facilities have undergone several renovations since the re branding most notably in 2004 and 2005 On April 27 2022 Disney announced that the hotel will be re themed to the artwork of Pixar Animation Studios 22 On September 11 2022 it was announced that the name would be the Pixar Place Hotel Disney s Grand Californian Hotel amp Spa based on the Craftsman style of architecture of the early 1900s which opened on January 2 2001 Attendance EditThe 2019 issue of TEA AECOM 2018 Theme Index and Museum Index The Global Attractions Attendance Report reported the following attendance estimates for 2018 compiled by the Themed Entertainment Association Disneyland 18 666 000 visits No 2 worldwide in the US up 2 from 2017 23 Disney s California Adventure 9 861 000 visits No 11 worldwide No 7 in the US up 3 from 2017 23 Ticket prices EditApproximately 60 000 people visited the park on Disneyland s opening day July 17 1955 24 when park admission was priced at 1 for adults and 0 50 for children This did not include access to rides and other individual attractions attraction tickets could be purchased separately for 0 10 to 0 35 25 Single attraction tickets were permanently eliminated in June 1982 25 access to all the park s attractions was henceforth included in the price of park admission tickets Admission prices have greatly increased since the gates first opened due in part to inflation the continuing construction and renovation of attractions and the addition of a second theme park Disney California Adventure As of 17 January 2020 update one day Park Hopper tickets allowing entry to both Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure are priced between 154 on Value days amp 199 on Peak days for adults and between 148 Value amp 191 Peak for children 26 Visitors can also purchase one park tickets and multi day tickets In addition to daily tickets in 1984 the Premium Annual Passport was introduced to the public The Premium Annual Passport granted daily entry for a year at a time for 65 for adults and 49 for children There were five different types of Annual Passports available for purchase which are the Disney Signature Plus Passport 1 449 the Disney Signature Passport 1 199 the Disney Deluxe Passport 829 the Disney Flex Passport 649 and the Disney Southern California Select Passport 399 27 On January 14 2021 Disneyland announced that they would be canceling the annual passport program 28 Disneyland Resort president Ken Potrock stated Due to the continued uncertainty of the pandemic and limitations around the reopening of our California theme parks we will be issuing appropriate refunds for eligible Disneyland resort Annual Passports and sunsetting the current program 29 A replacement program was announced on August 3 2021 titled Magic Keys 30 There are four different tiers of Magic Keys available Dream Key 1 339 Believe Key 949 Enchant Key 649 and Imagine Key 399 31 Management EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Executives Edit The president of Disneyland Resort is Ken Potrock Potrock reports to Josh D Amaro Chairman of Parks Experiences and Consumer Products Current management President Disneyland Resort Ken Potrock Senior Vice President Operations Patrick Finnegan Vice President Disneyland Park Kris Thieler Vice President Disneyland Resort Hotels amp Aulani a Disney Resort amp Spa Elliot MillsPast management President Disneyland Resort Rebecca Campbell 2019 2020 President Disneyland Resort Josh D Amaro 2018 2019 President Disneyland Resort Michael Colglazier 2013 2018 President Disneyland Resort George Kalogridis 2009 2013 President Disneyland Resort Ed Grier 2006 2009 President Disneyland Resort Matt Ouimet 2003 2006 President Disneyland Resort Cynthia Harriss 1999 2003 President Disneyland Resort Paul Pressler 1994 1999 Chairman of Walt Disney Parks and Resorts 1999 2002 President Disneyland Resort Jack Lindquist 1990 1994 Former Vice President Downtown Disney and Disneyland Resort Hotels 1998 2012 Tony Bruno Former Executive Vice President Dick Nunis 1972 1980 Operations Edit The day to day operations of the resort are overseen by a hierarchy of operations managers or stage managers who change with each shift They are colloquially known by their radio call signs which usually contain the manager s department name e g Merch Foods and an identifying number Usually One denotes the manager in charge of that department for Disneyland Park Two denotes the same for Disney California Adventure Three denotes the same for the resort hotels and Four denotes the same for Downtown Disney See also Edit Disney portal Trains portal Transport portal Greater Los Angeles portalIncidents at Disney parks Large amusement railways List of Disney attractions that were never built Rail transport in Walt Disney Parks and ResortsReferences Edit The Disneyland parking lot Yesterland Serratore Angela 2019 07 17 The beauty of the Disney beast Curbed Retrieved 2022 11 14 Hotels near Disneyland Anaheim Hotels Disneyland Resort disneyland disney go com Retrieved 2017 06 06 City of Anaheim A Brief History of Modern Day Anaheim Anaheim net Archived from the original on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2012 03 28 a b Marr Merissa 2007 10 17 Disney s 1 Billion Adventure The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2009 10 23 Glover Erin March 11 2015 24 Hour Event to Launch Disneyland Resort Diamond Celebration May 22 23 Disney Parks Blog Disney Retrieved 8 April 2015 Glover Erin October 25 2017 Parking and Transportation Improvements Coming to the Disneyland Resort Disney Parks Blog Retrieved October 25 2017 Glover Erin August 15 2015 Star Wars Themed Lands Coming to Walt Disney World and Disneyland Resorts Disney Parks Blog Retrieved September 17 2015 Disneyland March 11 2020 Introducing Avengers Campus an all new land opening July 18 at Disney California Adventure Park A Super Hero training complex for the next generation of heroes just like you LetsGoBeHeroes Tweet Retrieved March 11 2020 via Twitter Avengers and Other Super Heroes to Assemble in New Themed Areas at Disneyland Resort Disneyland Paris and Hong Kong Disneyland Disney Parks Blog Here s how to get in Disneyland s Avengers Campus without waiting in a 4 hour line MSN June 13 2021 Retrieved June 14 2021 Christina Maxouris California s Disneyland Resort will host a super Covid 19 vaccination site CNN Retrieved 2021 01 12 Pimentel Joseph June 7 2016 Disneyland Resort plans another luxury hotel The Orange County Register Retrieved December 29 2016 Martin Hugo 2018 08 16 Disney promised a luxury hotel and Anaheim offered 267 million in tax breaks but a growing feud has plans on hold Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2018 08 23 What s next for Downtown Disney now that the hotel project is on hold Orange County Register Orange County Register 2018 08 16 Retrieved 2018 08 23 Mickey amp Minnie s Runaway Railway to Roll into Disneyland Park Disney Parks Blog Retrieved 2019 05 06 New plan at Disneyland calls for squeezing in more rides restaurants and shops Los Angeles Times 2021 03 25 Retrieved 2022 01 26 Barrett Steven 2015 Disneyland s Hidden Mickeys A Field Guide to Disneyland Resort s Best Kept Secrets Intrepid Traveler Galante Mary Ann 25 May 1989 Tourism leisure Time Los Angeles Times Retrieved 27 August 2016 Vrana Debora 12 December 1995 Disney Acquires Pan Pacific Hotel in Anaheim Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2 April 2010 Sehlinger Bob Kubersky Seth Testa Len 2013 The Unofficial Guide to Disneyland 2013 Wiley p 42 ISBN 978 1 118 27759 1 Disneyland plans Pixar hotel makeover of Paradise Pier Hotel MSN April 28 2022 Retrieved April 28 2022 a b TEA AECOM 2018 Global Attractions Attendance Report PDF TEAConnect org Retrieved July 19 2018 Disneyland Attendance Info The Disneyland Linkage Retrieved May 11 2015 a b A Year By Year Comparison of Disneyland Tickets amp Prices Archived from the original on May 18 2015 Theme Park Tickets Disneyland Resort Retrieved January 17 2020 Annual Passports Disneyland Resort Retrieved January 17 2020 MacDonald Brady 14 January 2021 Disneyland cancels annual passholder program Orange County Register Chidbachian Alexi 14 January 2021 Disneyland Resort to end annual pass program FOX 11 Los Angeles Bloom Tracy 3 August 2021 Disneyland launches Magic Key What to know about the new annual pass replacement program KTLA 5 Los Angeles MacDonald Brady 3 August 2021 Disneyland Magic Key replaces annual passholder program Orange County Register External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Disneyland Resort Official website Disneyland Resort travel guide from Wikivoyage Coordinates 33 48 33 N 117 55 08 W 33 8091 N 117 9190 W 33 8091 117 9190 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Disneyland Resort amp oldid 1129789026, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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