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3. New Fantasyland (Tokyo Disneyland)

Image: Disney

Just as Magic Kingdom was finishing up its New Fantasyland, Tokyo Disneyland announced its own. In emotional send-offs to the park's Opening Day Original Star Jets and Speedway, a very large plot of land between Fantasyland and Tomorrowland could serve as a "blank slate", kicking off an ambitious, cinematic redesign. 

Essentially rebuilding the northeastern quadrant of the park, Tokyo's reimagining of the land would include a new, "Living Land" section themed Beauty and the Beast (featuring Belle's village and an associated dark ride in the Beast's castle) and another dedicated to Alice in Wonderland (presumably anchored by an Alice dark ride). The latter would even require the relocation of "it's a small world," which the park was apparently on board for, with art showing "small world" relocated a few hundred feet, closer to the park's Tomorrowland. 

But apparently, the Oriental Land Company that owns and operates the Tokyo Disney Resort was a little too hasty. Just a year after the announcement, OLC released a new batch of artwork, shifting their work area more toward Tomorrowland.

Image: Disney

The 2016 version of New Fantasyland left "it's a small world" alone and dropped the Alice in Wonderland area. Instead, the company doubled down on the Beauty and the Beast mini-land (with an indoor theater joining the planned trackless dark ride) while adding a little oomph to Tomorrowland by way of a spinning family flat ride themed to Big Hero 6 and plussing Mickey's Toontown with the "Minnie's Style Studio" walkthrough / meet-and-greet.

Ultimately, the whole project – which was meant to be a shining landmark of the park during the 2020 Tokyo Olympic games – hit a bit of a snag. Due to COVID-19, the Olympics were postponed, and the Enchanted Tale of Beauty and the Beast opened months after planned: September 2020. It's an unusual ride, but still an E-Ticket for the park! 

The question is, should Tokyo Disneyland have stuck to its original plans? Or are you happy with how to park's Fantasyland / Tomorrowland project turned out?

4. World Celebration

By now, it can't possibly surprise you to see that what Disney initially says is coming isn't always what shows up. That's doubly true post-COVID, when incalculable budget-cuts, scale-backs, and new leadership have changed the parks plans forever. It couldn't have come at a worse time for EPCOT – just kicking off a much, much needed foundational redesign. Given that the park has been plagued by decades of piecemeal solutions, quick fixes, and mismatched patchwork, it would've been really, really nice if Imagineers' master-planned, all-at-once aesthetic upgrade to the park had worked out.

Image: Disney

lot of the project has been "edited" since it was initially released in 2019, but the most recent announcement has to do with the former Communicore / Innoventions area, now grouped into a "neighborhood" called World Celebration. Initial art showed that Imagineers planned to tear one of the two mirrored, parentheses-shaped buildings out entirely, replacing it with the outdoor walkthrough Journey of Water and – most interestingly – with a new Celebration pavilion that would at last give the park a permanent Festival Center aside from the abandoned Wonders of Life pavilion. The multi-tier, "table" shaped pavilion with a planted, park-like roof would be a great place for upcharge Harmonious dinner packages, doncha think?

Disney did manage to demolish the west half of Innoventions. Trouble is, they probably wish they didn't. Post-2020, the company quietly edited D23 announcements, blog posts, and social media to replace any mentions of a "festival pavilion" with the language "festival area." It obviously took a while for the plans to coalesce, but in May 2022, new, edited concept art showed the new plan for World Celebration.

Image: Disney

Essentially rebuilding half of the half of Innovations they just finished demolishing, the new "festival area" will include an indoor expo hall for rotating celebrations, a large outdoor plaza for entertainment acts, and a smaller stage facing into the park's center for smaller acts or DJs. In a nod to nostalgia, the whole complex will be called CommuniCore (Hall and Plaza), even though that doesn't necessarily make sense. 

5. DisneySea's Frozen Land

Image: Disney

At least we can end on a high note. At the same time that the Oriental Land Company announced plans for its New Fantasyland in 2015, they also announced an expansion to Tokyo DisneySea – a whole new "port" themed to the 2013 blockbuster hit film Frozen. Handled like the rest of the park's themed lands (part Disney, part National Geographic), the "Scandanavian-themed port" would've been located on an expansion pad between the park's Lost River Delta and Tokyo Bay.

But a year later – when revised concept art of New Fantasyland was released – OLC announced that they'd "paused" the Frozen-themed port. The increasing costs of construction leading up to the Olympics may have been part of the reason, but no matter the case, it appeared that even the usually-ambitious OLC had backed off its plans.

Image: Disney

Just kidding! In 2018, OLC announced something much, much grander than the park's Scandavian port. A massive plot of land between Disneyland and DisneySea would be transformed into Fantasy Springs – a gargantuan, 25-acre land (twice the size of Cars Land) dedicated to Frozen, Tangled, and Peter Pan (each with its own E-Ticket ride), plus a deluxe, in-park resort hotel.

Given that DisneySea is known for its photorealistic, reality-rooted "ports," Fantasy Springs is quite a divergence. With enveloping mountains, characters carved into rockwork, mish-mashed intellectual properties, and a glowing, otherworldly vibe clearly modeled on Pandora, it's a jaw-dropping project that even exceeds DisneySea's typical scale... even if stylistically, it feels like a whole other park entirely.

What do you think? Will Disney's "Take 2" when it comes to adding Princesses and fairytales to DisneySea ultimately be a better project than its initial plans? And to that point, what other "Take 2s" ended up being the better path forward? Let us know in the comments below!

 
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