@@TheB1M The only thing there was the Magic Kingdom, and even that was not completely open. I also remember the World Symphany Orchestra gave a concert that evening in front of the Cinderella Castle.
One single private company transformed a regular swamp in the middle of nowhere into the most visited destination in the United States, and one of the most visited places on the entire planet. History can be amazing
It's amazing what one will do to promote sexual perversion. I wonder how many children have been sexually abused at WDW? We may never know. All we can do is not ever give them any more money. Unless sex with children is okay with you, and that's sad. just saying.
Did you know: you can fit 300 Disneyland's on Walt Disney World property? Another way of looking at it is Disney World property is twice the size of New York City. The vision Disney had 60 years ago was absolutely insanely daring, and brilliant.
Holy CRAP! Disneyland local here and I had no idea it was THAT much bigger.. Wow. I thought I got tired of walking here! Lol That's so cool. Roy really honored his brother til the end, and in the highest form. Beautiful
I love Disney Land, Disney World, and Disney cruises! My parents took us on a Disney Cruise when I was 16 for Christmas. I thought it would suck and be all for kids, but they make it fun for any age! Best vacation of my life. My family is in Palm Springs now and try to go to Disney Land once a year. It really brings some magic that can even make a tough person start to remember and go back to childhood when life is simple.
Walt Disney could've simply built a Disneyland clone in Orlando, those with a lesser vision would have. However, he dreamed of something better, something bigger and more magical than the original, and I'm so glad he did. Although I haven't been to WDW in thirty years, I remember my two visits like they were yesterday. It made an impression on my young mind that has stayed with me until this very day. Walt Disney was one of the greatest visionaries in history!
You should go back, I went earlier this year for the first time in close to 20 years and I loved it just as much as the previous times I went, planning on going again in 3 years when the park celebrates it's 50th Anniversary.
On Saturday, September 11, 1971, Disney did a test run of the Magic Kingdom as a shake-down, to see if the attractions were working properly. They allowed a huge crowd of people - all construction workers who had built the park, and their families - into the park for five hours, starting at sunset. Not every attraction was open but most were, and several bugs were found (and corrected before the official opening.) It was a trip, man! I got to experience the Haunted Mansion, the Jungle Cruise, the Swiss Family Robinson Tree-House (which I have never been in since!,) the Tiki Birds, Main Street, Cinderella's Castle, the Cable Cars, the Monorail, the Grand Prix race-cars and the Peoplemover, among other things. (I'm not sure, but I think we did Pirates of the Caribbean. I also am not sure if we rode the Steam Train around the park or not - it may not have been working. Space Mountain was still more than three years away.) Some of the original Main Street vehicles (replicas of 1910-era Jitneys and Omnibuses) are still there and, though they had 6 or 7 miles on them that night (they have speedometers, and I looked,) it has taken them 50 years to pile on 17,000 or so miles. I did not ride It's A Small World; in fact, it took me more than 35 years to bother to ride it. I even got to go into the Contemporary Hotel and its 12-storey-deep atrium. We were very, very busy, running around trying to see everything in five hours, and the time went by with lightning speed. I got to ride the Monorail three times: twice in the back, and at the end when we were leaving, in the Operator's Cab, and that was just frigging amazing! You want to talk about a Space-Age experience - an electric train suspended fifty feet over the ground, and right through a hotel!!! That was the summer of Apollo 15, after all. The monorail impressed the Hell out of me. There were only two hotels then; the Contemporary and the Polynesian. I both visited and rode through them both. I had a choice: the Monorail or the boat, and I chose the Monorail. So I can say that I got to tour Disney World twenty days before the official opening of October 1, 1971. There were 11,000 of us. I wonder how many are still alive? I was twelve years old and I will never forget it.
@@donaldstanfield8862 My step-father; he was an iron-worker who helped build Cinderella's Castle. It has a 170-foot-tall iron frame, just like the Statue of Liberty. If you could get deep inside it (I got to do that for about three minutes, juuuust once!) you would see that large parts of it are void space and you can still see where concrete was sprayed onto wire mesh and sculpted, in the way a swimming pool is made. The "caves" of Tom Sawyer's Island were made the same way. After the opening, my mother went to work in the Contemporary Hotel for three years. During that time, we could get in for free. I remember when hotel rooms were $21 a night, and you could rent a small boat and run around Bay Lake for $7 or $8 an hour, depending on the boat. It was fun to be a teenager then. It is, literally, 20 to 30 times more expensive today, depending on the hotel. Admission is 25 times as much. That's twice as high as inflation in general. I've been thinking about it, and about half of us were kids and half were adults. I think that now, less than half of us survive, perhaps 5,000 or less. (I'm 62 now.) That night was a privilege, I can tell you that! Like we used to say, it was groovy. Never to be repeated.
@Brad Johnston Your comment and the response to the question below was a Walt Disney Experience. Well described sir, you can actually taste the nostalgia. Life = Passion, groovy indeed.
One little factoid not mentioned here - is that the entire property was built above grade, which was the top of the water level. So yes, it was drained and construction began. But that intial foundation is the basement to the public's experience above. The attractions are on the "second floor," if you will. This was to curb flooding - and more importantly create a vast underground network to connect every point in the park.
Ya, you'd think that this construction channel would have mentioned the most interesting construction based fact about the park. He really didn't talk about its actual construction at all.
@@anikun -- well I don't how they do it but all of the garbage disposal is underground, as well as all of the dressing rooms for the staff. They leave their costumes there are and they're cleaned and pressed so none of their uniforms are taken home. It's a remarkable achievement. And the groundskeeping bill must be insane because the grounds throughout the 28,000 sq. miles are never anything but perfectly manicured and pristine.
Great video! One thing: River Country in Fort Wilderness was Walt Disney World’s first water park, not Typhoon Lagoon. It opened in 1976 and closed in 2005. My childhood hangout. :)
Typhoon Lagoon wasn't their first water park - they previously had River Country which opened in 1976 on the shore of Bay Lake, and only closed in 2005
rlt152 Technically, you’re both right. River Country effectively closed in 2001. As in, the last guest ever to swim there visited in 2001. However, when it closed then, it was only expected to be a “seasonal” closure, due in part to the post 9/11 tourism slump, the parks inability to compete with Typhoon and Blizzard, and seasonal maintenance. Even though it’s “open season” never actually came again, it wasn’t until 2005 that the company officially announced it’s permanently closed status.
@@TheKairielise It actually was permanently closed because Florida passed a law that all water parks had to end their slides/etc. into pools. Disney saw no way to convert their slides from emptying into the lagoon water to pools. River Country was the best. Until Volcano Bay...
@@cvn6555 that's just a rumor it did not close because of that reason it would have been grandfathered in and wet and wild had a ride that used Lake water and that ride never closed
I mean it's described as Walt having a prophetic vision to make Disney World, but his idea of doing so is widely accepted as being credited to him visiting and being inspired by Tivoli, in Copenhagen, Denmark. Tivoli is the second oldest amusement park in the world(the oldest being Bakken, also in Denmark).
I've been all over and Disney World is my choice for the best vacation.. Been there 8 times since the first year Animal Kingdom opened. I try and go at least every few years. I usually save for a year to go. Every time I go, It's like a new experience... My kids are grown and I'm a Grandfather but, My Wife and I love, Love, Love it... We usually go late October through the first week of Nov. Epcot has The Food & Wine festival with free concerts and food from all over the world. The crowds are lower because school is in and the weather is the best.
I was born and raised in fla and went all the time. Now I live in another state and go every few years when financially able. You are correct. A whole new experience every time
Known as Spaceship ‘Earth’. 7:30 🕢 Geodesic: relating to or denoting the shortest possible line between two points on a sphere or other curved surface. Perhaps earth’s surface area expands as a function of time? This is what Walt Disney set out to prove with EPCOT: Experimental Prototype Community Of The [Future]. However, EPiCenter Of Time, I feel, is more befitting.
Typhoon Lagoon was not Disney's first step into water parks. The first was the now abandend River Country. It was situated right next to Fort Wilderness Camp Grounds. The infrastructure as alot of the slides are still standing today.
It's an awful lot of fun to visit, but OMG the crowds are so much bigger now than that first opening year- when we all thought it was SO much busier than the Six Flags in Georgia. They first experimented with a water park over near the campground, I forget what it was called. Fort wilderness doesn;t sound wet enough. It had a couple of slides and maybe a lazy river, but tiny. They had no idea how popular a water park could be in Florida Heat!
I've Might Go To Walt Disney World Resort In Orlando Florida In The United States Of America During My New Orleans Louisiana And Orlando Florida Holiday Megatrip On My 30th Birthday Celebrations In 2023. Thanks Mate. X
Swamp lands or wetlands are actually estuaries for birds and many other species. I'd be more impressed if a developer takes a desert or rock wasteland and transforms it. Development and population growth has ruined Florida.
So many wonderful memories with family here. We visited twice with our two, young sons. It was the perfect 'training ground' to prep all of us for Universal! Soon ... we'll be back at Disney with our new granddaughter. The circle of life? ; )
Some history was omitted but it would had extended the video yet it is a generalized history of the creation and evolution of a park which most have grown up enjoying.
You should do another video on the innovative, but unsuccessful use of the modular building system that was used to build the two original resorts, The Polynesian Village and Contemporary Resort.
I've seen a documentary (not sure where) that showed how the Contemporary's modular rooms were made/installed. I guess the intent was to be able to just slide out the old room and slide in news ones for an "all-in-one" update down the road. I guess it didn't work because the building settled and trapped the "removable" rooms in place forever. Neat idea though and cool watching them get inserted! I'd LOVE to stay in one :-)
@@olddisneylandtickets It was never the case that the rooms were intended to be removable. Each room was welded permanently into place and exterior finishes were built around them. The entire point was simply to fast-track construction by finishing the rooms and the superstructure at the same time, and to use assembly line-style construction to save money, and improve quality as well. It's another one of those extremly popular but totally false rumors surrounding Disney parks.
Yeah surely the concept of Epcot as a modern corporate controlled gated community was perhaps the most socially interesting aspect of the entire project. I'd love to see more about that, both for its innovation in urban technology as well as its social implications as the upper middle classes pay to segregate themselves from the lower orders.
@@Ferocious_Imbecile - The Original EPCOT was not a gated community as we know them today. While there was security, the idea was you lived next door to work & commute to work would be automated thru people movers. Part of the perks of living there were that any & all products & innovations produced at the factories inside EPCOT would be tested by those living within the urban area surrounding the epicenter. EPCOT welcomed tourists - who didn't live there - to check out the facilities thru guided tours of the factories & shop at the mall-like facilities. Once inside, all transportation was thru monorail, or if you lived inside EPCOT, people movers. These were automated cars before automated cars were even a thing.
Would be interesting to see a B1M video on the new universal Florida park......its a once in every 2 or 3 decade opportunity to see a park of that scale and ambition being build in the US!
Typhoon Lagoon was NOT the first Disney water park. That honor goes to River Country in Fort Wilderness, which opened in 1976 but closed some years later.
I really wish there had been more information about the actual construction of Disney World and less of a timeline of the history of the Disney company, which most fans know.
That's because disney world was there before it was called Disney world. The elite needed to find a way to explain the megalithic structures that they couldn't remove. You won't find any pictures of excavations or construction. Much like most "capitol" style type building in just about every major us city. Look into mud flood theory and star forts
I wonder what Walt would have thunk about the MCU. I wonder if he’d be all for it, excited about it, and just completely off put by owning something that didn’t have any Mickey or Minnie in it.
Disney World appears to have memorialized Harambe since there aren’t nor have been any East African ports called Harambe. The largest E.African port is Mombasa. RIP Harambe; and thank you for your service.
You forgot to mention the oversized 'robot arms' that grab you at the front gate and hang you upside down by your ankles, and shakes you until all of your money falls onto the ground...
So blessed my parents used to take us for 2 weeks vacation our pick was Walt Disney world & occasionally to Naples it was heaven living in Florida in the 70’s
naxT890 yep, I guess there could be a legitimate reason for disliking this video. But that's kind of besides the point of exactly what the purpose of this particular video is.
There are actually several inaccuracies in the video. Overall, it's a good Reader's Digest version of Disney World history. But, some people that are Disneyphiles will likely find the generalizations to be too simplistic. Hence, the down votes.
Andrew Muhling ive watched quite a fw videos about this matter. Most of central florida was a wasteland of unbuildable swamps. Of course in hindsight it looks shady. But without Disney Florida wouldn't be what it is today. It would be more like the everglades . Which isn't a bad thing. But Disney caused the land to gain value, not the other way around.
The State of Florida would have been just fine without Disney. Tourism along the beaches has existed since the 1950s. The notion that Florida would look more like the Everglades without Disney is not remotely accurate. If you narrow your focus to Orlando, I'd agree with you. Instead of tourism, Orlando would probably have developed into a hub for defense contractors. Companies like Lockheed Martin have been in Orlando since the late 1950s.If anyone is interested in how and why Florida developed, check out the book "Florida's Megatrends" by David Colburn and Lane Dehaven-Smith.
@@alexdaley7616 i have no doubt it would have been fine. The tourist revenue is huge though. And i agree not all tourists go to disney, or universal. But that is a large chunk of dedicated tourists. They never really leave site either except for going to and from the airport. I like the west coast beaches from tampa down myself .
They can't do that on the east coast. They don't have the non-cinematic rights to most of the characters on the east coast. Those are owned by NBC-Universal. They are, however, building a Marvel Land at Disneyland and Disneyland Paris.
Happy to say I was there opening day: October 1, 1971
Awesome! What was it like??
@@TheB1M The only thing there was the Magic Kingdom, and even that was not completely open. I also remember the World Symphany Orchestra gave a concert that evening in front of the Cinderella Castle.
My family has an unused ticket book from that year. A ticket was $.50 and it is still good, as it says “never expires”
AMAZING!
That’s incredible! I would imagine there were cars backed up for miles to get into the park?
Walt Disney was amazing, he had great views of architecture.
He was a racist authoritarian headcase with delusions of grandeur....prob why the USA loves him so much
@@Cheeseatingjunglista WAT?
@@OttisR0t yes...pretty much established that he was a fascist and anti-Semite. don't you watch Family Guy?
Of course he did, he was a free mason
Cheeseatingjunglista yeah the USA is the worst with its individual freedoms and high standard of living. Where are you from? Belgravia?
One single private company transformed a regular swamp in the middle of nowhere into the most visited destination in the United States, and one of the most visited places on the entire planet. History can be amazing
Yup👍🏿
It's amazing what one will do to promote sexual perversion. I wonder how many children have been sexually abused at WDW? We may never know. All we can do is not ever give them any more money. Unless sex with children is okay with you, and that's sad. just saying.
@@bassplayercliff1961 how many children have been sexually abused by the catholic church?
@@bassplayercliff1961 ????
Look at Las Vegas and what has happened there, in credit of the Hoover Dam.
Did you know: you can fit 300 Disneyland's on Walt Disney World property? Another way of looking at it is Disney World property is twice the size of New York City. The vision Disney had 60 years ago was absolutely insanely daring, and brilliant.
Twice the size of Manhattan island, the same size as San Francisco.
And still growing
DO I care?
Holy CRAP! Disneyland local here and I had no idea it was THAT much bigger.. Wow. I thought I got tired of walking here! Lol
That's so cool. Roy really honored his brother til the end, and in the highest form. Beautiful
@@Ron19591 Yes you may.
I love Disney Land, Disney World, and Disney cruises! My parents took us on a Disney Cruise when I was 16 for Christmas. I thought it would suck and be all for kids, but they make it fun for any age! Best vacation of my life. My family is in Palm Springs now and try to go to Disney Land once a year. It really brings some magic that can even make a tough person start to remember and go back to childhood when life is simple.
i love that this is literally a documentary! you should get this on netflix!
Incredible story. I’m fascinated by the Disney brand. They must continue to have unbelievable leadership and, razor sharp focus. Disney is the best!
Walt Disney could've simply built a Disneyland clone in Orlando, those with a lesser vision would have. However, he dreamed of something better, something bigger and more magical than the original, and I'm so glad he did. Although I haven't been to WDW in thirty years, I remember my two visits like they were yesterday. It made an impression on my young mind that has stayed with me until this very day. Walt Disney was one of the greatest visionaries in history!
You should go back, I went earlier this year for the first time in close to 20 years and I loved it just as much as the previous times I went, planning on going again in 3 years when the park celebrates it's 50th Anniversary.
Imagine what Walt would've accomplished, had he lived another 10 to 15 years! Something tells me we'd be living in a very different world.
As I kid, and even now, WDFW always seemed eerie to me. Bad energy there.
This is absolutely one of your best videos, just because of the amount of detail you go into.
On Saturday, September 11, 1971, Disney did a test run of the Magic Kingdom as a shake-down, to see if the attractions were working properly. They allowed a huge crowd of people - all construction workers who had built the park, and their families - into the park for five hours, starting at sunset. Not every attraction was open but most were, and several bugs were found (and corrected before the official opening.) It was a trip, man! I got to experience the Haunted Mansion, the Jungle Cruise, the Swiss Family Robinson Tree-House (which I have never been in since!,) the Tiki Birds, Main Street, Cinderella's Castle, the Cable Cars, the Monorail, the Grand Prix race-cars and the Peoplemover, among other things. (I'm not sure, but I think we did Pirates of the Caribbean. I also am not sure if we rode the Steam Train around the park or not - it may not have been working. Space Mountain was still more than three years away.) Some of the original Main Street vehicles (replicas of 1910-era Jitneys and Omnibuses) are still there and, though they had 6 or 7 miles on them that night (they have speedometers, and I looked,) it has taken them 50 years to pile on 17,000 or so miles. I did not ride It's A Small World; in fact, it took me more than 35 years to bother to ride it. I even got to go into the Contemporary Hotel and its 12-storey-deep atrium. We were very, very busy, running around trying to see everything in five hours, and the time went by with lightning speed. I got to ride the Monorail three times: twice in the back, and at the end when we were leaving, in the Operator's Cab, and that was just frigging amazing! You want to talk about a Space-Age experience - an electric train suspended fifty feet over the ground, and right through a hotel!!! That was the summer of Apollo 15, after all. The monorail impressed the Hell out of me. There were only two hotels then; the Contemporary and the Polynesian. I both visited and rode through them both. I had a choice: the Monorail or the boat, and I chose the Monorail. So I can say that I got to tour Disney World twenty days before the official opening of October 1, 1971. There were 11,000 of us. I wonder how many are still alive? I was twelve years old and I will never forget it.
Awesome story, what a great experience, who in your family did what to get you included!?
@@donaldstanfield8862 My step-father; he was an iron-worker who helped build Cinderella's Castle. It has a 170-foot-tall iron frame, just like the Statue of Liberty. If you could get deep inside it (I got to do that for about three minutes, juuuust once!) you would see that large parts of it are void space and you can still see where concrete was sprayed onto wire mesh and sculpted, in the way a swimming pool is made. The "caves" of Tom Sawyer's Island were made the same way.
After the opening, my mother went to work in the Contemporary Hotel for three years. During that time, we could get in for free. I remember when hotel rooms were $21 a night, and you could rent a small boat and run around Bay Lake for $7 or $8 an hour, depending on the boat. It was fun to be a teenager then. It is, literally, 20 to 30 times more expensive today, depending on the hotel. Admission is 25 times as much. That's twice as high as inflation in general.
I've been thinking about it, and about half of us were kids and half were adults. I think that now, less than half of us survive, perhaps 5,000 or less. (I'm 62 now.) That night was a privilege, I can tell you that! Like we used to say, it was groovy. Never to be repeated.
@Brad Johnston Your comment and the response to the question below was a Walt Disney Experience. Well described sir, you can actually taste the nostalgia. Life = Passion, groovy indeed.
@@jimmy5003 Thank you. It was absolutely the highlight of my middle childhood.
One little factoid not mentioned here - is that the entire property was built above grade, which was the top of the water level. So yes, it was drained and construction began. But that intial foundation is the basement to the public's experience above. The attractions are on the "second floor," if you will. This was to curb flooding - and more importantly create a vast underground network to connect every point in the park.
Ya, you'd think that this construction channel would have mentioned the most interesting construction based fact about the park. He really didn't talk about its actual construction at all.
and that was only done with the magic kingdom, not any of the other parks
Yes sir...
That is only true for Magic Kingdom and the first section of EPCOT. Not the entire property.
@@anikun -- well I don't how they do it but all of the garbage disposal is underground, as well as all of the dressing rooms for the staff. They leave their costumes there are and they're cleaned and pressed so none of their uniforms are taken home. It's a remarkable achievement. And the groundskeeping bill must be insane because the grounds throughout the 28,000 sq. miles are never anything but perfectly manicured and pristine.
Great video! One thing: River Country in Fort Wilderness was Walt Disney World’s first water park, not Typhoon Lagoon. It opened in 1976 and closed in 2005. My childhood hangout. :)
I got my first chocolate covered frozen banana there.. never heard of such a thing..
Roy Disney was the mastermind behind this project.. Walt had the ideas, up it was Roy who did most.
Typhoon Lagoon wasn't their first water park - they previously had River Country which opened in 1976 on the shore of Bay Lake, and only closed in 2005
Actually closed in 2001 but you are correct, it was one of my favorites
rlt152 Technically, you’re both right. River Country effectively closed in 2001. As in, the last guest ever to swim there visited in 2001. However, when it closed then, it was only expected to be a “seasonal” closure, due in part to the post 9/11 tourism slump, the parks inability to compete with Typhoon and Blizzard, and seasonal maintenance. Even though it’s “open season” never actually came again, it wasn’t until 2005 that the company officially announced it’s permanently closed status.
@@TheKairielise It actually was permanently closed because Florida passed a law that all water parks had to end their slides/etc. into pools. Disney saw no way to convert their slides from emptying into the lagoon water to pools. River Country was the best. Until Volcano Bay...
@@cvn6555 that's just a rumor it did not close because of that reason it would have been grandfathered in and wet and wild had a ride that used Lake water and that ride never closed
Well it actually closed in 2001 and they tried to fix it but closed before finished
Fun fact: the day Disney flew over Bay Lake and decided that’s where he wanted to build Disney world was the same day JFK was shot.
8:34 my king Harambe lives on ❤️
Hollywood Studies was first opened as MGM Studios.
More specifically The Disney/MGM Studios
Better name then the new one.
@@blakesworld4463 true... but MGM held some trademarks that Disney could not use for some merchandise..... so they changed the name to make more money
Moon Scar There’s more to it than that.
Thank you! I just posted the exact same thing
I mean it's described as Walt having a prophetic vision to make Disney World, but his idea of doing so is widely accepted as being credited to him visiting and being inspired by Tivoli, in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Tivoli is the second oldest amusement park in the world(the oldest being Bakken, also in Denmark).
I've been all over and Disney World is my choice for the best vacation.. Been there 8 times since the first year Animal Kingdom opened. I try and go at least every few years. I usually save for a year to go. Every time I go, It's like a new experience... My kids are grown and I'm a Grandfather but, My Wife and I love, Love, Love it... We usually go late October through the first week of Nov. Epcot has The Food & Wine festival with free concerts and food from all over the world. The crowds are lower because school is in and the weather is the best.
I was born and raised in fla and went all the time. Now I live in another state and go every few years when financially able. You are correct. A whole new experience every time
Your channel is so awesome!
THANK YOU!!!!
Rip Walt Disney thanks for building such an amazing attraction I must visit one day
0:28 Walt Disney World is actually the largest theme park resort in the world (by far), and the number one vacation destination in the world.
PT Barnum was correct. Bet Disney patterned after Barnum
Known as Spaceship ‘Earth’. 7:30 🕢 Geodesic: relating to or denoting the shortest possible line between two points on a sphere or other curved surface. Perhaps earth’s surface area expands as a function of time? This is what Walt Disney set out to prove with EPCOT: Experimental Prototype Community Of The [Future]. However, EPiCenter Of Time, I feel, is more befitting.
@@LNTunes1010 Experimental Prototype City Of Tomorrow...
You build it and they will come 😅
Love Disney ❤️
So interesting! we had never seen a detalied story of Disney! we love your channeel man!
Try Rob Plays channel. He saw awesome information about Disney World.
Gareth Askham thank you! We will check it out!
Glad to help. Here's his channel: th-cam.com/users/robplaysthatgame
Really??? There's literally 1000's of them
Very concise. I love all the aerial shots. Really great selection of photos.
Typhoon Lagoon was not Disney's first step into water parks. The first was the now abandend River Country. It was situated right next to Fort Wilderness Camp Grounds. The infrastructure as alot of the slides are still standing today.
I remember visiting Hollywood Studios when it was still MGM studios
Same here, in fact I didn't get to visit as Hollywood Studios until 2018.
He is way beyond thinking. Salute and also dedication.
I never knew it was called the Florida Project! Gives added meaning to the film
It had some other names as well, including Project X.
What a vision....RIP Walt Disney
This video was 2 years ago what the fuck, I remember watching just hours after it released. Time is consuming me :(
It's an awful lot of fun to visit, but OMG the crowds are so much bigger now than that first opening year- when we all thought it was SO much busier than the Six Flags in Georgia. They first experimented with a water park over near the campground, I forget what it was called. Fort wilderness doesn;t sound wet enough. It had a couple of slides and maybe a lazy river, but tiny. They had no idea how popular a water park could be in Florida Heat!
Who's watching this on the 50th anniversary year of the opening of Disney World?
Was there in ‘76 & ‘77...Good times.
great job
On the documentary... Walt Disney world is my favorite place to go with family .. it truly is magical ❤️
That was the most detailed doc I've ever seen on Disney world. Wow! Thanks so much for sharing!
Man do I love Disney
I felt very lucky to go most of the parks at Disney World a few years ago. The ball was still at epcot at the time
2024.....it's still there
I've Might Go To Walt Disney World Resort In Orlando Florida In The United States Of America During My New Orleans Louisiana And Orlando Florida Holiday Megatrip On My 30th Birthday Celebrations In 2023. Thanks Mate. X
What music did they use. That brought me to Disney even though I’m sitting on my couch.
Brilliant project😊😊😊😊😊
A fairytale brought to life indeed♥️💛💝💖💙💚💜💐🎀😍☺️😊
Swamp lands or wetlands are actually estuaries for birds and many other species. I'd be more impressed if a developer takes a desert or rock wasteland and transforms it. Development and population growth has ruined Florida.
agreed.
Cause fuck the desert animals
You must be a very boring person.
Lol I would be impressed if he built it in detroit.
Walt would be turning over In his grave If he seen what EPCOT has become. He had a plan and they changed It.
Well done. Thanks from Orlando Florida.
Love the longer length video you put out! Keep it up!
I was at walk Disney yesterday it was veery fun😊
Walt disney would be so proud of how his vision transformed today
Great video!
That Alladin reference, smooth~
So many wonderful memories with family here. We visited twice with our two, young sons. It was the perfect 'training ground' to prep all of us for Universal! Soon ... we'll be back at Disney with our new granddaughter. The circle of life? ; )
Some history was omitted but it would had extended the video yet it is a generalized history of the creation and evolution of a park which most have grown up enjoying.
You should do another video on the innovative, but unsuccessful use of the modular building system that was used to build the two original resorts, The Polynesian Village and Contemporary Resort.
I've seen a documentary (not sure where) that showed how the Contemporary's modular rooms were made/installed. I guess the intent was to be able to just slide out the old room and slide in news ones for an "all-in-one" update down the road. I guess it didn't work because the building settled and trapped the "removable" rooms in place forever. Neat idea though and cool watching them get inserted! I'd LOVE to stay in one :-)
@@olddisneylandtickets It was never the case that the rooms were intended to be removable. Each room was welded permanently into place and exterior finishes were built around them. The entire point was simply to fast-track construction by finishing the rooms and the superstructure at the same time, and to use assembly line-style construction to save money, and improve quality as well. It's another one of those extremly popular but totally false rumors surrounding Disney parks.
Great work BIM! One of your best 10/10
Ah wow... thanks so much for your feedback! 🙂👍👍
This was interesting .
Damn interesting !
Great video, could you please look in closer depth at EPCOT? (The prototype city not the theme park)
There is a channel called Rob Plays, and he only talks about Disney related things. I'm 90% cerain he has a video on what you want.
Celebration is what EPCOT was supposed to be
Yeah surely the concept of Epcot as a modern corporate controlled gated community was perhaps the most socially interesting aspect of the entire project. I'd love to see more about that, both for its innovation in urban technology as well as its social implications as the upper middle classes pay to segregate themselves from the lower orders.
@@Ferocious_Imbecile - The Original EPCOT was not a gated community as we know them today. While there was security, the idea was you lived next door to work & commute to work would be automated thru people movers. Part of the perks of living there were that any & all products & innovations produced at the factories inside EPCOT would be tested by those living within the urban area surrounding the epicenter. EPCOT welcomed tourists - who didn't live there - to check out the facilities thru guided tours of the factories & shop at the mall-like facilities. Once inside, all transportation was thru monorail, or if you lived inside EPCOT, people movers. These were automated cars before automated cars were even a thing.
Experimental
Prototype
Community
Of
Tomorrow
Man if only Walt and Roy Disney were still here and saw how much his empire grew he'd be PROUD!!!
This channel is so amazing, you should open a patrion. I wanna support you!
Did no one notice the typo at 3:10?
Such a great story
A theme park centered around Marvel would be its most successful theme park ever. Guaranteed.
Actually Roy Disney only died 2 MONTHS after the Walt Disney World park opened. He died in December 1971.
Exactly. A wish was made never forget that
I like the Picture quality. Thanks.
What an incredible story and a well put together video.
Thank you!!! ...and thanks for watching!
Would be interesting to see a B1M video on the new universal Florida park......its a once in every 2 or 3 decade opportunity to see a park of that scale and ambition being build in the US!
Typhoon Lagoon was NOT the first Disney water park. That honor goes to River Country in Fort Wilderness, which opened in 1976 but closed some years later.
Great video as usual!
WOW! I love your video's and this Walt Disney World video is spectacular, that smooth vibe really works well for this subject - THANK YOU!
Great video and thank you for it! ☺
A concise history of Walt Disney World in 10 minutes. Take notes History Channel.
I really wish there had been more information about the actual construction of Disney World and less of a timeline of the history of the Disney company, which most fans know.
That's because disney world was there before it was called Disney world. The elite needed to find a way to explain the megalithic structures that they couldn't remove. You won't find any pictures of excavations or construction. Much like most "capitol" style type building in just about every major us city. Look into mud flood theory and star forts
@@5thdmt any link to back that up?
@@vermontsmostobesetubaplaye1988 nope I made all of that up
@@vermontsmostobesetubaplaye1988 but if you're interested in some unexplainable truth look up mud flood and star forts
@@5thdmt yeah, I already know all about that stuff. I was wondering if you had info specific to Disney World, but I guess not.
I truly believe that if Walt was alive during construction Disney world would look alot different....he had a vision.
Yet another fantastic, informative video. Thank you for finding so many interesting topics, and researching them so well to produce these videos.
I heard Florida residents get discount on admission.
We pay 1000 for best annual pass
I sneak in, best price going
We do
We do but during the summer we get blocked out
n310ea the general admission normally now as of 2019 is $120.00 but us floridians pay about $90.00 as long as you prove your a Florida resident.
Wow. Very informative. Thank you.
I love this channel and video! Well done! Love the ending!!!
River Country was their first foray into water parks - not typhoon lagoon. It opened in 1976 and closed in 2001.
I wonder what Walt would have thunk about the MCU. I wonder if he’d be all for it, excited about it, and just completely off put by owning something that didn’t have any Mickey or Minnie in it.
8:31 is it dedicated to Harambe as well?
I’d expect the answer is yes
That is the name of the themed African village that has been with the park since it opened in 1998.
Haha such a coincidence, that's great
Disney World appears to have memorialized Harambe since there aren’t nor have been any East African ports called Harambe. The largest E.African port is Mombasa. RIP Harambe; and thank you for your service.
@@krapfantasy Harambe is Swahili for "All put together" its not a coincidence its a real word they use in Kenya
By 2030 Disney will own everything
You forgot to mention the oversized 'robot arms' that grab you at the front gate and hang you upside down by your ankles, and shakes you until all of your money falls onto the ground...
Naw, that’s the IRS.
You guys are one of the best channels on TH-cam every video Is informative and interesting and well produced
Typhoon Lagoon was the second waterpark. The first, and my favorite, was River Country.
One of my favorite videos.
Great as always
Thank you!!
Really nice and informative.
Thanks for this Episode 🙌🏽 seeing what’s happening to Disney World in 2022. Hopefully you’ll have a new update!
your research is excellent
So blessed my parents used to take us for 2 weeks vacation our pick was Walt Disney world & occasionally to Naples it was heaven living in Florida in the 70’s
Three people have given this a thumbs down. Shame on them. Haha, great video.
They must be the employees who live on a starvation wage. While disney executives make millions.
naxT890 yep, I guess there could be a legitimate reason for disliking this video. But that's kind of besides the point of exactly what the purpose of this particular video is.
There are actually several inaccuracies in the video. Overall, it's a good Reader's Digest version of Disney World history. But, some people that are Disneyphiles will likely find the generalizations to be too simplistic. Hence, the down votes.
I'm giving you a dislike, shame on me...LOL
This video would have been impressive, had it not been narrated almost word-for-word directly from the Walt Disney World page on Wikipedia.
Pretty impressive what a few greased palms and some good old fashion backroom deals can do.
~ laughs ~
Andrew Muhling ive watched quite a fw videos about this matter.
Most of central florida was a wasteland of unbuildable swamps.
Of course in hindsight it looks shady. But without Disney Florida wouldn't be what it is today. It would be more like the everglades .
Which isn't a bad thing. But Disney caused the land to gain value, not the other way around.
The State of Florida would have been just fine without Disney. Tourism along the beaches has existed since the 1950s. The notion that Florida would look more like the Everglades without Disney is not remotely accurate.
If you narrow your focus to Orlando, I'd agree with you. Instead of tourism, Orlando would probably have developed into a hub for defense contractors. Companies like Lockheed Martin have been in Orlando since the late 1950s.If anyone is interested in how and why Florida developed, check out the book "Florida's Megatrends" by David Colburn and Lane Dehaven-Smith.
@@alexdaley7616 i have no doubt it would have been fine.
The tourist revenue is huge though.
And i agree not all tourists go to disney, or universal.
But that is a large chunk of dedicated tourists.
They never really leave site either except for going to and from the airport.
I like the west coast beaches from tampa down myself .
I knew some of this but not to this detailed. Why I subscribed cause it's a great channel for enrichment. I grew up in Florida near Disney world.
Actually, in 1989, it opened as Disney MGM Studios.. only becoming Hollywood Studios in 2008 on Jan 6
wow - this is a quality channel
Walt Disney was a Genius.
@3:35 Headline is hilarious. "Girl reporter" convinced-we've come some way in the last 60 years...
One of the biggest construction projects ever.
Fifth park... Marvel World!! Make it all super hero themed and make it more roller coaster heavy
They can't do that on the east coast. They don't have the non-cinematic rights to most of the characters on the east coast. Those are owned by NBC-Universal. They are, however, building a Marvel Land at Disneyland and Disneyland Paris.
I love the serious tone in his voice...and thr music...its Disney..pep it up!