Settings

Theme

Disney announce business plan to develop residential communities

disneyparks.disney.go.com

14 points by ganonm 4 years ago · 10 comments

Reader

qgin 4 years ago

I know Disney’s first residential development, Celebration, FL got mocked relentlessly for being a “fake place” but I think that’s incredibly misguided.

If you’ve visited Florida, you know that almost all new development is subdivisions with a name like “Olympus” and an entrance with a grand signage and sometimes even a gatehouse. There are 4 or 5 house plans that are repeated throughout the enclosed development. There is nothing except endless repeating houses. For any shopping to schools or coffee or libraries or anything else, you’ll have to dump out onto the 6 lane semi-highway outside and find your way to strip mall wrapped in a sea of parking.

They are 100% as ”fake” as Celebration, but the real problem is they are built at a non-human scale. They are built for cars and maximum isolation.

Celebration was built on a human scale, tucking cars away behind buildings, making sure houses were built around mini parks and within walking distance of stores and shops and schools.

The idea that building mixed use urbanism is fake and somehow strip malls and isolated subdivisions are real… I don’t understand that line of argument.

All large scale developments are “artificial” in the sense that they are planned, but why not use that moment of planning to plan something for humans?

  • paulryanrogers 4 years ago

    Walkable communities are great. A bigger concern might be corporate ownership and its effects in the long term

bryanrasmussen 4 years ago

As I recall this was part of Walt's visions and plans for Epcot and never really came anywhere because everyone thinks Disney is a nice place to visit but almost nobody would want to live there.

  • giantg2 4 years ago

    This seems a little more distanced from the theme, right?

    It will be interesting to see how they balance limiting "Disney" theme prevalence vs differentiating themselves from other communities.

  • kwertyoowiyop 4 years ago

    Yep, Epcot was supposed to be real, not an exhibition.

  • evanb 4 years ago

    “Experimental Prototype Community Of Tomorrow”

LegitShady 4 years ago

Corporate control of communities is bad. This is basically softcore introduction to fascism under Mickey mouse ears.

Kick corporations out of community centers out of neighbourhood associations and out of government. It's not worth having your community or city be controlled in any way by the Disney board of shareholders.

  • clove 4 years ago

    How is it fascism?

    • LegitShady 4 years ago

      It's a large stepping stone to corporate control and management of cities which is right next door to fascism. Baby steps.

      Disney board members shareholders and staff should have no input anywhere on how people live. This is wrong, deeply so, as is all the google and other companies "connected cities" that they so happen to control and run.

      This stuff should be banned so heavily no corporation will want to broach the topic ever again.

kwertyoowiyop 4 years ago

It’s worth a shot. Let’s see what they can do. Nobody will be forced to choose that lifestyle if they don’t want to. Some people love The Villages, while the mere idea of such a place gives others the willies. Vote with your pocketbook.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection