New Island Tower at Polynesian Village Resort: Opening Date, Timeline & Progress Photos

Walt Disney World is building a new DVC Island Tower at Polynesian Village Resort. This post shares the opening date, booking timelines, when we expect points to go on sale, room photos, and a look at construction. Plus, our opinion of the Disney Vacation Club expansion and why this is likely happening. (Updated September 10, 2024.)

Located on the shores of Seven Seas Lagoon and on the monorail line to Magic Kingdom, the Island Tower replaces Disney’s Spirit of Aloha Dinner Show. The new Island Tower will essentially be between the existing Polynesian Village Resort and Disney’s Wedding Pavilion, which itself is adjacent to the Grand Floridian.

This high-profile Magic Kingdom resort area has already become overcrowded in recent years with the addition of the Villas at the Grand Floridian. A new tower will only exacerbate that, and could end up putting undue strain on infrastructure such as the monorail. Fortunately, it’s also adding amenities that should, in theory, help reduce strain on the Great Ceremonial House.

“It’s no secret that our Members and guests love the monorail resorts at Walt Disney World,” said Bill Diercksen, senior vice president and general manager of Disney Vacation Club. “Expanding our Disney Vacation Club offerings at the Polynesian would give our Members and Guests yet another incredible option for staying close to the magic while making vacation memories that last a lifetime.”

Plans for the Island Tower at the Polynesian include a variety of guest room types, new recreation offerings, and dining options. DVC will continue to release more details and glimpses inside the Island Tower as the opening date draws nearer.

Speaking of its debut, the Island Tower at Disney’s Polynesian Villas & Bungalows will open on December 17, 2024.

All guests can now book the Poly’s Island Tower online or by contacting (407) 934-7639. Currently, only cash rate reservations are available. Disney Vacation Club members will be able to make points-based reservations at a later date that has yet to be announced.

This being DVC, points are really the bigger concern. On that front, there are still several unknowns. The first is what the point charts will be like for the Island Tower. Our best guess is that they’ll resemble Disney’s Riviera Resort–the newest DVC resort at Walt Disney World–but with a slight “Poly Premium.” Similarly, existing members are wondering when these point charts will be released. Honestly, we expected them already, so we’ll go with “any day now.”

The next unknown is when DVC sales will start for the Poly’s Island Tower. There’s still nothing official on this front, but predictions are a bit easier: October 1, 2024. This is several months behind Disney’s Riviera Resort, but everything about the Island Tower has been delayed as compared to that (so many other actively selling properties is the likely reason).

October first is the Polynesian’s anniversary, and we suspect Disney will choose that date as a way to “honor” that or something. In reality, though, it’s more meaningful as the start of Disney’s new fiscal year, which is always a time when the company always targets for sales, price increases, etc.

Then there’s pricing. Past precedent, logic, and rumblings would all seem to dictate that the Island Tower will sell for the same prices as the Villas at Disneyland Hotel: $239 per point. With no benefit of inside information, it would be unwise for me to go out on a limb and question this. I’m going to anyway. My expectation was (is?) that the Island Tower would break the $250 per point barrier, or at least hit $249.

My thinking is that the Polynesian is a fan-favorite Walt Disney World resort and, regardless of how I feel about the exterior of the Island Tower, this thing is a license to print money and will have robust demand from day one. And that’s even at a premium price point. Disney Vacation Club knows this, which is likely why they pushed for a hideous tower here in the first place–to maximize room inventory in a high-demand location.

In the event that they aim too high, there’s always the possibility of future incentives to help sales. I guess the alternative is a lower base price, no incentives, and a price increase in early 2025. That also seems possible. Just something to consider as you debate if/when to buy.

Finally, there’s the question of when points bookings will open.

This will be tiered, as always. New Poly purchasers will likely be able to make reservations almost immediately–maybe within a week or two after sales start. From there, existing members will be allowed to book, probably one month later–by November 17, at the latest. It’ll be interesting to see whether DVC draws a distinction between new Poly owners, current Poly owners, and current owners at other resorts.

In the end, whatever happens with all of the above will be on a condensed timeframe. There’s already a shorter runway ahead of the December 17, 2024 opening date. That’ll be even truer if DVC waits until October 1, 2024 to start sales. Regardless, we’re expecting news very soon and will keep you posted!

Now let’s turn to the latest updates for Fall 2024. First up, Walt Disney World has revealed the New Moana Pool Area, Restaurant & Castle View Gardens.

Wailulu Bar & Grill will feature indoor and outdoor seating areas and a bar space with views of Cinderella Castle at Magic Kingdom. The dining room will be adorned with Polynesian-inspired artwork including floating tropical fish sculptures. It’ll also have Moana paintings and an abstract Polynesian Stick Chart, an ancient navigation tool used to traverse the seas.

The Island Tower will also be home to Cove Pool, a brand-new zero entry pool offering even more opportunities to relax. It’ll also feature Moana’s Voyage, a whimsical new splash area that will feature life-size sculptures of Moana and her iconic canoe.

There will also be exclusive access to four tropical terrace gardens for those staying at the Poly’s Island Tower. Each terrace garden will feature vibrant artwork, lush foliage and seating areas. The terrace gardens promise big views of the golf courses or Seven Seas Lagoon, making them spectacular spaces for viewing Magic Kingdom fireworks.

Disney Vacation Club has also shared a First Look at Guest Rooms for the Island Tower at Polynesian Resort.

The new Poly tower will offer villas brimming with original artwork inspired by the Polynesian Islands, wayfinding and the natural elements: earth, water, wind and sky. Each guest room will also feature custom art inspired by Moana.

In our view, these rooms look pretty good with a lot of depth and texture, albeit a bit too much beige and neutral colors. But we never expected the rooms to be an issue, as that’s something DVC does exceptionally well.

Now let’s turn to a construction update as work progresses on the Polynesian tower as of September 2024. Not much has changed since our last update a couple months ago–more painting on the exterior and some scaffolding down–which is presumably because work has moved inside the Island Tower…

It’s interesting to watch the work–to the extent that it’s still visible. The Island Tower looks better with these coats of paint than it did as plain concrete, but that’s not saying much. It’s still ugly. But hey, at least you won’t be able to see the outside when you’re staying inside it, I guess?

The boxy tower is incongruous with everything else around the monorail loop, and sticks out like a sore thumb. That’ll be the case when it’s fully finished, since it’s obviously not going to get any shorter or have a visual profile consistent with the existing Polynesian Village Resort. I still can’t believe Disney thought this was acceptable to build on the shores of Seven Seas Lagoon. It was one thing with Disney’s Riviera Resort or Gran Destino Tower, which are comparatively isolated, but this is part of the ‘skyline’ of Magic Kingdom’s monorail loop.

This Island Tower at the Polynesian is progressing even faster than did Disney’s Riviera Resort or Gran Destino, and those went up pretty quickly! It’s also amusing how much faster Walt Disney World builds resorts versus attractions. Maybe “amusing” isn’t the right word. It’s a little discouraging. Defenders of Disney will point to the comparative complexity, which is at least partly fair. But CommuniCore Hall and Plaza and the surrounding trees in EPCOT aren’t exactly the pinnacle of Imagineering. The unfortunate reality is that Disney purposefully prolongs construction timelines in many of those projects to spread capital expenditures over multiple fiscal years. But I digress.

The bottom line is that the DVC tower at Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort should easily make its December 17, 2024 opening date.

In other news, Disney Vacation Club has officially confirmed that the Island Tower will be part of the existing condo association at the Polynesian Villas & Bungalows. This is exactly what Disney Vacation Club did with the Big Pine Key addition at Grand Floridian, so it’s not a total shock.

This means a few major things. First, all current direct and resale owners of Disney’s Polynesian Villas & Bungalows will have access to the new Island Tower as part of the 11 month booking window, and those who buy at the Island Tower will have access to the legacy inventory of the bungalows and studios in the longhouses.

It also means there will be a combined 2066 ownership end date for all owners. Annual dues will also be the same for the Island Tower as they are for the existing Poly Villas. Currently, dues are $8.23 per point, but we’d note that these are based on actual costs, so the addition of the Island Tower could, in theory, increase or decrease dues.

We’d expect a slight decrease–economies of scale and all that–especially since diluting costs on those over-the-water bungalows has gotta be a good thing. However, labor costs have caused all resorts to increase in the last few years, so don’t expect amounts to actually drop. It should be more of an offset, whereas other resorts will likely increase during the same timeframe.

In our view, adding the Island Tower to the existing association is the right move. Several years ago, we addressed a common question: Why is Disney Vacation Club Availability So Limited? That’s worth reading, but in case you don’t want to bother, part of the reason was the bungalows. Adding the new Poly tower to the current condo association should help dilute those points, improving overall availability.

Additionally, this provides more variety for DVC members who already own at Disney’s Polynesian Villas & Bungalows. This will add duo studios, 1-bedroom villas, 2-bedroom villas, plus the brand-new two-bedroom penthouse villas, as well as a different type of deluxe studio than in the current longhouses. This will make the Poly Villas far more versatile.

Finally, it won’t be subject to the dreaded resale restriction, since that does not exist as part of the current condo association. I’m starting to wonder whether this protectionist “experiment” at Disney’s Riviera Resort was deemed a failure, and perhaps we won’t see it at the Cabins at Fort Wilderness or Reflections – A Disney Lakeside Lodge. (Then again, it did appear again for the Villas at Disneyland Hotel, so perhaps not.)

All of this makes buying at the Polynesian Villas & Bungalows more attractive to us. Granted, that’s because we’d probably only consider buying via the resale market–and I’m still very hesitant until both seeing this in person and experiencing the degree to which it burdens the resort’s infrastructure. One thing is for certain, though–this seals the deal that we wouldn’t buy at Disney’s Riviera Resort!

Disney’s Polynesian Villas & Bungalows currently has 380 Disney Vacation Club villas, including the largest Deluxe Studios at any Disney Vacation Club resort at Walt Disney World. There are also the unique over-the-water two-bedroom Bora Bora Bungalows, which are not nearly as popular and have been problematic for their impact on the points pool.

This follows other work around Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort in the last few years. That included enhancements to the Great Ceremonial House, a new porte-cochère, and rebuilt monorail station. All of that looks good, a nice step forward for the resort that maintained its thematic integrity while bringing needed improvements to the aging property.

Room refurbishments were also part of the Poly’s overhaul. See our Review, Photos & Video: New Moana Rooms at Polynesian Village Resort for a tour and thoughts on the changes from our most recent hotel stay. If you’re looking at the existing DVC rooms, see our Review, Photos & Video: New Rooms at Polynesian Villas.

Polynesian DVC Island Tower Commentary

I realize change is inevitable, but I’ll miss this path and the beaches it passes. I’ve spent many a morning photographing the sunrise over here, using the twin and triplet palm trees on these beaches to frame the Polynesian’s longhouses.

Newer Walt Disney World fans may not realize it, but this stretch of land was once relatively tranquil. I don’t recall what it was like before the Wedding Pavilion was built in the mid-1990s, but up until the Villas at Grand Floridian, it was a peaceful area with large swaths of beach and green space between the Polynesian and Grand Floridian. Now, there’s a lot of parking and development, with more on the horizon. Really has a “paved paradise to put up a parking lot” kind of feeling to it.

My sincere hope is that the Island Tower is built as if it were a standalone resort like Riviera Resort or the planned Reflections, rather than in the style of Bay Lake Tower or the Villas at Grand Floridian. Meaning, that it contains counter and table service restaurants and other amenities.

The last time we stayed at the Polynesian, the beach was packed with guests during the Disney Enchantment fireworks–to the point that there was literally no available space–and the lobby was incredibly crowded with people waiting to be seated at ‘Ohana and elsewhere. The existing Polynesian infrastructure is often already stretched to its breaking point, and this tower needs to provide relief to that. Adding guest rooms without amenities will further exacerbate those problems, so we really hope that isn’t the plan.

Regular readers will recall that I was harsh about the proposed Reflections – A Disney Lakeside Lodge (above), which was supposedly a “nature-inspired” resort. It was slated for the former River Country water park location along the shore of Bay Lake between Wilderness Lodge and Fort Wilderness.

Reflections – A Disney Lakeside Lodge was one of the projects put on indefinite hold as a result of the closure. Based on Walt Disney World’s activities on that construction site and scrubbing all references to Reflections from the internet, the project was safely assumed to be cancelled. I was ecstatic. Absolutely over the moon in response to its cancellation. Reflections was a half-baked plan from the start, and Disney not proceeding with it was a good thing.

This Poly tower news makes me wish that Reflections – A Disney Lakeside Lodge were never cancelled. Not because I’ve suddenly had an about-face on Reflections (far from it), but because it would mean that this very-similar looking project at the Polynesian would not be happening.

Perhaps it would be simply a matter of forestalling the inevitable, with the site between the Grand Floridian and Polynesian Village Resorts slated for future expansion down the road. I’d still roll the dice on that. At least delaying development might mean getting something that looks appropriate for the area, and has some semblance of theme.

As for commentary about the design, I had to check my calendar when I first saw the Poly tower concept art, thinking maybe it was April Fools’ Day. Much to my disappointment, this is not a lame joke. (It is lame, just not a joke.)

I won’t rehash all of it here, but my criticisms of this new DVC tower at the Polynesian are nearly identical to those of Reflections. That’s in no small part because this project bears a striking resemblance to the cancelled Reflections tower. (My bad–Imagineers were inspired by the original Poly plans. Sure thing.)

Disney’s recent approach to developing hotels adjacent to existing resorts doesn’t inspire much confidence, and this looks like a generically modern design that would be at home in Holiday Inn’s portfolio.

Anyone who has been to pretty much any major metro area in the last few years has undoubtedly seen something at least vaguely similar to this Polynesian addition. It looks a lot like mixed-use developments in Anaheim–not to mention the Disneyland Hotel DVC tower (below), or even the cancelled Reflections plan.

That these three designs are virtually indistinguishable despite being located a three very thematically-different resorts should say all that needs to be said. Despite Disney’s best efforts to invoke past plans and history to preemptively stymie criticism of this unambitious addition, the actual “inspiration” is simply modern, generic hotel/condo/apartment towers.

Perhaps some of you will dismiss this as needless negativity, especially those who were looking forward to Reflections or are big fans of recent Walt Disney World resort additions. That’s obviously your prerogative, and to each their own.

The thing is, we have not been negative about every hotel change at Walt Disney World. To the contrary, we’ve been more positive than the average reader about recent resort reimaginings, changes, and expansions. The DVC conversion at Grand Floridian makes complete sense, and those rooms look nice. The new lobby at the Contemporary is fantastic.

Beyond that, most of the new room designs in the last few years are generally good, with Riviera Resort (above) providing the template for how those should be done. Every DVC room redo since then–from Saratoga Springs to Boulder Ridge and even the new Disneyland Hotel–has been a marked improvement. Disney is getting function right–it’s form that’s the problem.

More specifically, it’s the new builds and cost-cutting design that I find problematic. In the last few years, Imagineering has really found its groove with the interiors, including room redesigns. By contrast, it seems like the prevailing sentiment is that the exterior and integration of theme simply does not matter. It’s cheaper to build boxy towers, so that’s what they do.

When you compare Walt Disney World resorts built before the mid-1990s to ones built or redesigned in the last few years, there’s generally a clear division. Current projects are often interchangeable with real world Holiday Inns or other mid-tier chained brand hotels.

Look at the difference between BoardWalk Inn or Beach Club and the new casino tower at Coronado or the Fairfield Inn Des Moines Airport Riviera Resort. There simply is not the same depth of detail in the designs with new builds at Walt Disney World–they are not themed.

One explanation is that Disney simply doesn’t want to spend on themed architecture, which eat into profit margins on DVC contract sales. This makes sense, and also explains why Disney is adding these towers alongside existing resorts rather than making them standalone properties. By building adjacent to current hotels, they can share infrastructure or don’t need to offer every amenity on-site.

Another explanation is that the company wants to make things as crowd-pleasing as possible so as to not alienate any potential customers. The thing about this approach is that when you try to appeal to everyone, you end up appealing to no one. Either way, I don’t get it.

I’m not entirely unreasonable about development at Walt Disney World, I just think it needs to be done in a sustainable way, and one that’s respectful of what already exists. Like Gran Destino Tower or Disney’s Riviera Resort, I have no doubt that this Poly tower will have great guest rooms, offer worthwhile features, and functional enhancements to the Poly.

I’d imagine it’ll also add 1-bedroom and larger rooms to Disney’s Polynesian Villas & Bungalows, something that has been requested by DVC owners for years. From that perspective alone, I suspect many members will consider this addition a “win.”

As much disdain as I have for the exterior appearance of Gran Destino and the Riviera, they are both excellent resorts if all you care about is their substantive offerings and view them only from the inside, or in isolation. To be fair, that may be the case for many of you.

The outside appearance of Four Seasons Orlando isn’t exactly anything special, but it’s a great hotel on the inside. The critical distinction is that Four Seasons is known for superlative service, not Disney design–and the Four Seasons didn’t impact the existing ‘skyline’ of Walt Disney World when built.

Personally, I think it’s very fair to say that Walt Disney World should aim higher as themed design and immersive environments are its calling card. Exterior design being “good enough” for downtown Anaheim should not be the bar by which Imagineering is measured. Something being sufficient to “complement” Angel Stadium is not quite the same as it fitting with the flagship Grand Floridian or iconic Polynesian. Those are exemplars of themed design, and if additions aren’t capable of matching their look, they simply shouldn’t be built.

At this point, I feel like I’m wasting my breath with all of this, though. If you don’t look at the concept art for the Polynesian tower at the top of this post and immediately think that it’s out of place, there’s probably nothing I can say that’ll change your mind. We simply have different tastes and expectations about the caliber of product Walt Disney World should be delivering given the costs and its rich legacy. To me, this is all very obvious, but I suppose reasonable minds may differ.

Planning a Walt Disney World trip? Learn about hotels on our Walt Disney World Hotels Reviews page. For where to eat, read our Walt Disney World Restaurant Reviews. To save money on tickets or determine which type to buy, read our Tips for Saving Money on Walt Disney World Tickets post. Our What to Pack for Disney Trips post takes a unique look at clever items to take. For what to do and when to do it, our Walt Disney World Ride Guides will help. For comprehensive advice, the best place to start is our Walt Disney World Trip Planning Guide for everything you need to know!

YOUR THOUGHTS

What do you think of this Walt Disney World news? Are you optimistic or pessimistic about a new tower being added to Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort? Happy that DVC is expanding the Poly Villas, or wish they’d build a new stand-alone resort? If you’re a Polynesian (hotel) fan, are you upset by this or indifferent to it? Do you agree or disagree with our assessment? Any questions we can help you answer? Hearing your feedback–even when you disagree with us–is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!

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259 Comments

  1. Terrible. I always thought of the Contemporary as a reflection of Tomorrowland, the Grand Floridian as Main Street and the beloved Polynesian as Adventure Land. A new hotel should reflect some part of the Magic Kingdom. A tower will ruin the “south sea island escape” vibe. So disappointed..

  2. I agree. It’s sad they are seemingly creating resorts that are more “basic” and do not offer the uniqueness that was once Disney. What’s worse, is they are permanently removing the Spirit of Aloha which was a wonderful show/dining experience! I definitely thought it would have been back to celebrate 50 years…sad. They should just go back to the separate Reflections resort. Also improvement is always needed for the monorail/transportation systems so money should be spent there in addition to or instead of this expansion.

  3. They should just use the plans from Aulani! One of those towers would be so much better than this Hampton Inn! So sad.

  4. I guess I’ll be the voice of dissent here because I’m SO excited about this!!! Of course, I hope the exterior will look better than the current rendering. But while I dislike Riviera’s exterior and what it does to poor ol’ CBR, I’m not as harsh on GDT as others. What even is the theme of CSR? I think that’s why I don’t mind the tower because the theme there is ambiguous, and I think the tower itself is gorgeous, especially at night and during Christmas.

    Overall, though, I’m just excited because this lines up with the timing we plan to buy into DVC, and I’m so glad it’s at a resort I actually like. We wanted to buy sooner, but alas I got engaged, and what would have been our DVC funds are now going into a wedding. Boo hoo, I know. This will almost certainly be going on sale around the time we’ve recovered and are looking to purchase, and because I think GFV2 is likely to sell out before Riviera, I was dreading the thought of Riviera being the only resort in active sales. But then I also hope Poly2 gets folded into the existing association so as not to include those pesky resale restrictions. That and the points chart will be the main drawback for me, so we’ll see how that plays out. I will definitely be following developments here closely, with great excitement!!

    1. Have you ever stayed at Coronado?? It was a Spanish/mexican themed resort. The rooms and lobby were beautiful with intricate wood carvings and hidden mickeys. It was warm, cozy and inviting. Now it’s ultra modern and lost this old world charm. I used to love it but am SO disappointed with its new theming. It’s generic and feels like a Hilton. Caribbean beach lost a lot of its charm with the new massive tower sitting at the end-it feels crowded and and not like a hidden Caribbean Beach as it once did.
      Disney has so much land-I’m just not sure why they’re cramming all these towers in to areas that rely on these private feeling areas like CB.

  5. It’s like a time warp and confuses theming. It’s jarring. Simply adding very tall longhouses would be better. (Still terrible, but better theme-wise.)

  6. I 100% agree with your assessment of the new towers and theming. I am extremely disappointed with riviera-totally takes away from Caribbean Beach, I hate the new tower at Coronado and I actually hate the new room updates there too. It totally takes away from the old world Spanish design. It all feels very generic, exactly as you said, like I’m staying at a generic hotel chain in a mid city.
    It’s super disappointing to see the lack of design and theming. I’m disgusted to learn about their plans of this new Poly Tower-its horrible, it does not even blend or compliment style like the bungalows do.
    I’m really disappointed in the direction Disney has gone regarding theming and it feels like cut corners with recycled design ideas. This is not the Disney I know and love.

  7. I’m so over this fad they have of building enormous towers next to 2-3 story existing resorts. The size difference makes it look HORRIBLE. I’ve written off Coronado and Caribbean Beach because of how badly the towers stick out-they’re total eye sores. Not to mention the additional 1000s of people crowding the resorts-pools, transportation, restaurants- making everything more frustrating and less fun. And to do it to the beautiful, laidback, relaxing Poly?! F*** Chapek.

  8. Holiday Inn? C’mon, Tom – so harsh.

    That rendering could easily pass for a Courtyard, maybe even an Embassy Suites 😉

    In all seriousness, I’m in full agreement with your assessment. The rendering is offensively bland and unbecoming the WDW name, let alone a spot occupying prime real estate next to two giants. And it’ll undoubtedly demand a premium price point even though the design is anything but. If I had any desire to stay in a hotel that looks like this, I’d just stay offsite.

    As a shareholder, I’m disappointed too. Travel will not be this robust forever – how are they going to sell rooms those rooms at a premium price during a downturn? The cost to do the design right is not immaterial but it’s also not exponential. This feels like short term, penny-smart thinking at the expense of long term – but isn’t that par for the course with everything else these days?

    I miss Michael Eisner.

    1. Eisner was the golden age of Disney. Wish he could come back and clean up these messes.

  9. This is the ugliest thing I’ve ever seen. When it was marketed for Reflections, I figured it would be fine because it was somewhat “separated off” from other things, and I had more faith in TWDC at that time. This design would be fine at a separate location, but in the middle of the Grand Floridian and the Polynesian – and it looks like neither, and matches with the theme of neither – it is the worst ever. Who had this ridiculous idea? It would be better to just build another Poly-style building and plop it down. This is ridiculous. And it isn’t wasted space, either – they regularly have Disney wedding receptions and ceremonies in that area.

  10. I had the same thought when I saw that picture…seemed like a cheap way to re-use plans they already had. Not only is it disappointing for its lack of theme, but it will also cause a downgrade to the theme of the two resorts next to it who will have no choice but to have it in their sight-lines. I’ve been wanting to stay at Poly and Grand Floridian some day just to see what it’s like, and now…it seems like I’ll need to make those reservations sooner rather than later to get the ‘pure’ experience. It’s…disappointing. But I can’t think of anything except the copied tron coaster that Disney has built recently that hasn’t been a modified box of some sort. Maybe they have gotten rid of the people capable of thinking outside of it?

  11. I don’t mind the top photo, with balconies, etc. But really don’t like the glass fronted one further down in your post.
    And do you have any idea if there will be 1 or 2 bedrooms in there? We have wanted this option so badly since we joined at the Poly in 2015.
    I don’t care for the studios and the bungalows that we have stayed at a few times are wonderful but really chew up the points.

  12. Minor quibble – you say it would look good in Holiday Inn’s portfolio, but then your picture shows an Marriott property. 🙂 But yes, one of the reasons we visit WDW and stay in the resorts is theming. These new hotels don’t have it. We were in Vegas in January for an event and as I was scrolling to the picture of the Coronado tower I thought that would look right at home on the strip, and that was before reading your comment about a casino. (FWIW, the newer hotels in Vegas have gone away form theming as well it seems. No more Venetian/New York/Excalibur.)

  13. Was excited when I saw the headline of expansion since this is one of my favorite places to get away, then I saw the artist concept and immediate disappointment settled in. Come on Disney, be better. sigh

  14. Not a fan of what I think the site line will look like after this is done. Also while it is being built of course is a downer if you are staying near it.

  15. “The thing about this approach is that when you try to appeal to everyone, you end up appealing to no one.” I teach usability and UX, and one of my go-to truisms is “Widening your target doesn’t improve your aim” (credited to Alan Cooper). Design for a narrower audience, and you’ll delight your intended audience while satisfying your secondary audience. When you design for no one, you get no one passionate about your product, and passion-less consumers find ways to spend dollars elsewhere.

  16. So much for the charm of the Polynesian Village resort if they drop this signficantly bigger building on the site. Is that 8 or 9 stories high? Pah.

  17. Love the Poly and I would have bought in here if Disney didn’t make all their recent changes that has ruined the experience

    My guess is next project to be announced be be the location opposite of BLT where the existing Contemporary Garden Wing is located.

    Same premise with in monorail and 2 supporting buildings already there.

    1. You mean pay people? Come on……Remember the robot cameras?

      This is Chapeks Disney……..CUT, CUT, CUT………the charge MORE, and MORE and MORE while hiring LESS, LESS, LESS

    2. @Deboreah Leonard
      They get what most want. Cheap prices for everything from Signature restaurants to the smallest food booths, & every on site resort with the most perks. Oh, better make that with Vegan everything (read fake meat, dairy, etc. Must taste like meat, etc, but not actually BE it). So they build bigger at a lower cost per sq ft. It’s what every company is doing everywhere. Where restaurants & hotels used to be unique, now they all look the same.
      Companies listen to those who are loudest. They want cheap, perks, booze, no waiting. They get cheap, booze from bulk wine to individual cocktails in a box, long lines. But, the problem with that is so does everyone else. Whether in Podunk, Happy Camper (very small fictional place), or a strip in the middle of nowhere off a highway, everyplace will soon look alike. Familiar. What the loudest want.
      How do we stop it? 1. Yell louder. 2. Be willing to pay for the quality you want. 3. Or stay home (often in an apartment that looks like all the others in town or in a development of McMansions). Modern = ugly (often)

  18. Isn’t that a photo of the concept art for the new DVC tower at The Disneyland Hotel mixed in there?

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