Tiana’s Bayou Adventure Construction Starts with Splash Mountain Rockwork Removal
Splash Mountain has been closed at Magic Kingdom for nearly two months, and in that time construction has started on transforming the attraction into Tiana’s Bayou Adventure. This photo update features a look at the progress thus far, offers an official update from Walt Disney World, and our commentary about the timeline.
For starters, what’s happening right now is probably better categorized as demolition or destruction rather than construction. This type of modification is a necessary prerequisite to forward progress and actual construction commencing, especially in light of how the facade of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure won’t have the same ‘mountainous’ profile as its predecessor.
However, as with all things about the Splash Mountain ride reimagining, this is a charged topic. Using terms like “demolition” or “destruction” in a headline feels a bit too ominous, clickbaity and inflammatory…even if accurate. Suffice to say, this is the awkward portion of the transformation from Splash Mountain to Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, setting the stage for the new attraction to take shape.
Speaking of which, Walt Disney World has indicated that we should start to see visible forward progress starting in Summer 2023. That’s when the tiara-topped water tower emblazoned with the Tiana’s Foods logo will make its way to Magic Kingdom and be installed in front of the existing mountain.
According to the company, the Tiana’s Bayou Adventure project team of Imagineers recently traveled to New Orleans to capture the essence of the Mardi Gras celebration–energy, colors, rhythms of the music, and more–to infuse into Tiana’s Bayou Adventure. Here’s a video:
My reaction to that video, to borrow the wise words of Star-Lord in Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind, “…what do you mean?! That’s so vague!”
Then again, that could describe so many of the videos about Tiana’s Bayou Adventure that Disney has released thus far. To each their own, but I’d love to hear about the actual attraction reimagining. On a positive note, this video is the first time that quality footage of the day/night concept loop from the D23 Expo has been shared online.
Above is a look at the model of the tiara-topped Tiana’s Foods water tower that’ll be installed in the coming months, which was also shared back at the D23 Expo.
In case you missed it, here’s the Tiana’s Bayou Adventure Backstory About Tiana’s Foods. This has some fans concerned, but I’m personally not one of them. It sounds like this will be mostly relegated to the queue, setting the stage for the adventure to come. As with other queue backstories, it’s something most guests will probably miss.
How many regular guests “get” that Cosmic Rewind takes place in the Wonders of Xandar Pavilion? That’s also should stage-setting to transition from EPCOT to the main adventure of that attraction, but paying careful attention to the galleries is absolutely unnecessary to understanding or enjoying the core of Cosmic Rewind.
That’s just one of many examples where the queue rewards astute observers, but is unnecessary to the main attraction experience. I’m absolutely expecting something similar with Tiana’s Bayou Adventure. But I digress.
Before we get to the Tiana’s Bayou Adventure construction (or Splash Mountain destruction dun dun dun) photos, I wanted to share a quick update on what I’ve been hearing about this project. In the last update to our main Tiana’s Bayou Adventure: Everything You Need to Know post, I mentioned that a single team of Imagineers is working on both the Walt Disney World and Disneyland versions of the attraction, and has prioritized the Florida incarnation.
To the best of my knowledge, that’s the main driver of delay in closing Splash Mountain at Disneyland. Park ops there might’ve also wanted the capacity while Indiana Jones Adventure and Toontown were down, and those have since returned. Maybe that version of Splash Mountain will close after spring break in light of that. I truly don’t know.
In addition to that, another thing I’ve mentioned (repeatedly) is that the “Late 2024” opening target for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is incredibly aggressive, and that I wouldn’t be the least bit surprised if the actual opening date slips into 2025.
I’ve since received pushback, for lack of a better term, on this. Supposedly, the timeline is realistic and matches the aggressive pace of the project and resources being allocated to it. So long as installation and modifications go smoothly, the opening of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure should easily make its target 2024 date.
Or so I’m told.
To be fair, Imagineering has achieved impressive turnaround times on past projects of somewhat similar nature. As we’ve mentioned before, Frozen Ever After and Guardians of the Galaxy: Mission Breakout are the big recent ones. With that said, the transformation of Splash Mountain into Tiana’s Bayou Adventure has a level of ambitiousness and complexity above those. It’s also an old attraction with a lot that needs to be done, and assuming that’ll go smoothly is quite bold and presumptuous, in my opinion.
Suffice to say, I remain skeptical that Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is going to open in 2024. However, I wanted to clarify that this is my opinion and speculation, rather than a credible rumor. Perhaps I’m a bit overly cynical as a result of recent projects and their lethargic paces, but so much of that was deliberate.
In any case, the actual rumor is that Tiana’s Bayou Adventure will open in 2024. Which, I guess, isn’t really a rumor at all since that’s what Disney is publicizing, too. So long as the company puts 2024 in each update on the attraction’s progress, there’s (continuing) internal confidence that they’ll meet it. If or when the date is quietly dropped, that would be a red flag that the project is behind schedule. Even with all of that said, I’m still skeptical.
On that note, let’s turn to some new construction/destruction photos of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure/Splash Mountain at Magic Kingdom…
To the point about this project having an aggressive timeline but resources to match, above is active work I saw during the most recent Extended Evening Hours at Magic Kingdom. These nighttime photos were all taken after midnight.
There were at least a dozen workers in the flume, and those were just the ones visible to me–most of the attraction is concealed by walls or the mountain itself. Nevertheless, the site was very much active.
Quickly running through other updates, I also saw that the Splash Mountain attraction marquee has now been removed.
That was the last sign (literally and figuratively) of Splash Mountain in Magic Kingdom. Everything else was already gone.
Adjacent to the flume, there are a couple of spots where the rockwork has been cut into, revealing the steel infrastructure of the mountain behind it.
It’s unclear why this is happening. One possibility is that the construction team needs to access what’s behind the rockwork. Another is that the plan is to reshape portions of the mountain to give it a different appearance.
My money would be on the latter explanation, especially at the top of the mountain. Based on the concept art, we already know this is being rounded up to minimize the mountainous appearance of Chick-a-Pin Hill.
As we’ve seen while watching Moana’s Journey of Water take shape from the monorail, rockwork is now prefabricated in sections and can be installed pretty quickly once on site. So it’s entirely possible that more of the mountain will be torn apart and pretty quickly replaced with new sections to give the facade a different appearance.
During the course of consecutive days and nights in Magic Kingdom, I saw an increased amount of scaffolding installed in the flume and around the facade of the mountain. I’d expect more of the rockwork to be removed in the coming weeks, revealing the steel frame underneath. That’s an especially safe bet at the top of Chick-a-Pin Hill.
If you’re in Magic Kingdom, I’d recommend taking a few minutes to watch the work from the bridges in Frontierland; there’s a lot of activity happening. Could be a good sign for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure opening in 2024!
Before we offer some concluding thoughts, here are a ton more new construction photos of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure:
Ultimately, it’s heartening to see so much activity outside the exterior of the former Splash Mountain and future Tiana’s Bayou Adventure. While so many resources devoted to the outside is good, what’s happening inside is what really matters. Obviously, we cannot see that, but my hope is that the interior crew is exponentially larger, with a huge team working to transform the attraction in a thorough and meaningful way.
As I’ve said before, I hope Disney is dumping a ton of resources and a healthy budget into Tiana’s Bayou Adventure. Even if you were vehemently opposed to this reimagining, what’s done is done. The best everyone can–and should–hope for now is that the end result is an attraction that will exceed expectations and live up to the legacy of its predecessor. Both Splash Mountain and Princess and the Frog deserve as much, and Tiana’s Bayou Adventure being an excellent attraction with elaborate themed design, details, show scenes, and impressive effects is the best outcome for all.
Personally, I really hope Disney shares something soon to reinforce exactly that–and instill fans with a sense of optimism and excitement about this transformation. Despite Disney offering a lot of updates on the process of the attraction’s development, they’ve said very little of substance. I’m ready to hear about the tech, see concept art of show scenes, footage of Audio Animatronics. Something, anything offering reassurance that Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is going to be high-quality and fun.
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YOUR THOUGHTS
Thoughts on the Tiana’s Bayou Adventure construction or Splash Mountain destruction? What changes to the exterior are you expecting to see take shape in the coming months? Expectations regarding the Splash Mountain reimagining timeline? Agree or disagree with our assessments about this project or its construction? Keep the comments civil, as this is not the place for politically-charged arguing, culture wars, antagonism, personal attacks, or cheap shots.
I’m not really a fan of the tiana’s food theme, but since that’s what they are going with, I’d like a nice NOLA table service restaurant to go with it.
Such a phenomenal ride that became a victim of politics. Splash Mountain, you will never be forgotten. RIP
Such a phenomenal ride that became a victim of politics. Splash Mountain, you will never be forgotten. RIP
I really dislike this websites format of editing old articles so you have to read through to find updates. Who decided this was a good idea?
Helpful Hint:
He will often say “this is a repeat, if you’ve read this before then skip to….”
Explanation:
I haven’t been able to read the blog as much the last month and as I am getting caught up, I appreciate him reiterating info I’ve missed recently. The writer operates on the idea that every reader doesn’t breathlessly await his next article/post and needs the repeat.
Perhaps Disney will shore up the construction crew for Tiana by moving resources off the Great Dirt Pit. lol! I also spent some After Hours time on Thursday night looking at this construction progress and was glad to see it finally moving forward. I loved Splash Mountain, for what it was, but I was definitely ready to see it transform into something new. I agree that literally any glimpse inside the ride would generate more excitement than yet another marketing video for New Orleans vacations. I’m sure there are reasonable hesitations to share snapshots that will, inevitably, be seized upon as evidence of Disney doing too much or too little, striking the wrong tone, etc… Better, I suppose, to tackle all that at once, when the completed ride can be (hopefully) taken in its full context.
I was thinking the same thing about the Epcot Dirt Pit! Disney, you really should finish up with one mess before you start another… Someone’s momma did not raise ’em right.
My biggest hope is they tone down the splash and other water features so you can ride and not get very wet. That would vastly increase ridability for my family
Hopefully Disney doesn’t create the inside on the cheap side…….
My main question is – will you still see the Mickey profile before descending the hill?!
I am very excited for this and even I think the number of research trip videos is out of hand. I can get behind one, maybe two videos about them, but at this point I would rather they go radio silent than keep releasing these puff pieces every couple of months. If you’re gonna release teaser videos that show nothing, at least do it from inside Imagineering warehouses!
I’m actually pretty optimistic this will make “late 2024,” at least on the East Coast. Disney can work fast when they want to, they just haven’t wanted to lately. I think Iger’s recent bullishness on the parks leads to this being prioritized more than it would have been under Chapek.
Incredible photos. As much as I’d prefer to ride the mountain I’m now looking forward to watching some of the construction.
I share your skepticism but currently see no reason it can’t be ready to “rock” in 2024.
I agree, Tom. I think people would really start getting excited of it if we get to see the next generation of audio animatronics in use. We’ve seen the screen-faces…what are they going to do next to up the game? Right now, looking at a classic attraction being chunked apart just makes me feel bad, and I was *ready* for this to end and looking forward to a new ride. Watching people going on ‘research trips’ just looks to me like someone is getting paid to go on vacation, which doesn’t improve my opinion either. If want to get others enthusiastic about this (which I do) – I need substance!
They’ve done similar videos for the nextgen AAs for the Frozen rides in Hong Kong and Tokyo, so following that blueprint would make sense.
I both agree and disagree about the research trips. They’ve always happened, and although some fans groused about Joe Rohde’s prolific travels, the fruits of those were very evident in the end result. Those trips were necessary and worth the money. Here, the repeated trips feel less like essential research and more like posturing (IMO) to make the attraction seem more significant.
Research trips are definitely necessary! But yes…we, the consumers, need to see them with context. Just a little hint of what the research directly will influence would justify so much…
” So long as installation and modifications go smoothly, the opening of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure should easily make its target 2024 date.”
I had to chuckle at this, because I agree with your skepticism at the announced timeline. These are some bold assumptions to make when renovating a 30-year-old flume ride! Let’s hope nothing goes wrong and there are no delays. I wouldn’t bet on it, though. I do share your general optimism for the attraction. If you can cut through the marketing fluff, the small bits of substantive info they’ve shared sound positive on balance.
“If you can cut through the marketing fluff, the small bits of substantive info they’ve shared sound positive on balance.”
I agree, but I also think it’s very difficult to cut through the fluff. I tried to contextualize the Tiana’s Food queue backstory and explain why none of that should be concerning, and the reader response was still overwhelmingly negative.
I understand that this is a charged reimagining and many fans are predisposed towards negativity, but that’s not true of everyone. IMO, Disney is doing itself no favors with the focus on research trips and the process of developing the attraction. I can’t imagine that’s actually getting anyone excited about Tiana’s Bayou Adventure.
I’m not asking for the whole ride to be revealed (I hate spoilers), but a 5-second clip of an impressive AA would go a long way towards generating buzz and silencing some of the criticism.
Thanks for the photos. As much as this has been discussed, it didn’t really seem real until seeing the construction progress. Seeing the photos kind of tugs at the heartstrings for me. My son was terrified to go on Splash Mountain his first time, and then he loved it and we rode in 2x in a row. We closed out some cold December evenings at MK on that ride looping it with no crowds on our return trips.
Totally understand that.
We have similar fond memories and nostalgia for rides on Splash Mountain, but it became “real” for me even before the ride closed. It was in such sorry shape for much of last year that I guess I came to terms with it earlier, and was ready for the ride to be put out of its misery. I would’ve been fine with it closing months before it actually did.
Even though I liked Splash Mountain more, I had a more difficult time coming to terms with the closures of Great Movie Ride and Universe of Energy. Odd how these things hit each of us differently.