Archive for the 'Compare' Category

4 Emporium and 1 Grand Emporium

There is not many famous Disney departement stores. Yet in every 5 Kingdoms, after your first few yards you encounter one of their biggest. It is where many guest finish their days, lazily scrolling between its isles…

This article is about the 5 Emporium stores of the 5 Magic Kingdoms.
Emporium stores… It does sound familiar thanks to their real history. Adolph Feiss founded the first one in San Francisco in 1896. They quickly spread throughout California, Nevada and even Utah. Though the original stores and Main Street’s don’t look the same, it may be where Walt got its inspiration to build its own departement store. 
Many details from the old facilities were included in the mockup like the ceiling attached “money mover” system that allowed the cashier, not permitted to manage devises to send the customer’s money away and wait for the change to return.
Now as for Kingdoms differences… Among the 4 Emporium only two kind exist. Only Tokyo got itself a unique Grand Emporium enclosed in its World Bazaar canopy.

The first kind, the original is used in Disneyland and guess where . Hong Kong :) Again, those two sharing the same Main Street, they share the same Emporium for the exception of the colors which appear brigther in the Asian version.

The second kind is the richer and more colonial oriented Emporium of Walt Disney World which was later replicated in Disneyland Paris. Those two even bear the same color scheme. Difference lays inside, for Disneyland Paris’ was refurbished a couple a years ago to adopt a brigther interior made of white and gold. The original emporium all bear a wooden marketed decor. Paris with its white inside look even more southern than its Florida counterpart.
Inside they all have ceiling rotonda inspired by the great departement stores of the past centuries. Disneyland’s uniqueness lays in its upcorners scenery. Those inspired the Design of the early Disney Stores from the 90’s.
In every Kingdom this large store actually takes twice as much as what its facade looks it does.
In Anaheim it takes the whole block up to Carnation Café, in Paris and Hong Kong as well. Tokyo’s Emporium also uses the south west block of World Bazaar. Orlando’s Emporium even went further in 2001 when it outgrew its premises by absorbing the whole West Center street. 
Access is made from the Town Square corner and along the street up to the 2003 addition in Walt Disney World. In Disneyland Paris, entry is also possible via the Liberty Arcade, note that from the Emporium you can enter Dan’s Barber Shop as well.
I was unfortunately unable to confirm this, but it seems Disneyland Paris is the only emporium to hold two representation of its two american counterparts. The first one illustrate my article, and the second one follows.

Every Emporium follow a tradition as to always bare richly decorated window display, where characters from the year Disney releases animate to entertain passing guests.
In every Kingdom the Emporium is the store, the place where you’re sure to find what you want, even this tiny accessory you spoted in the deep jungle of Adventureland. 
They are the perfect way to end you day picking souvenir, or waiting for the parade. 
For many they’re just a sidewalk you wait on waiting for your wife to end the shopping tour, but even then, can you pass the time by watching its multiple windows and changing facades. 

Above picture is from Flickr user Inkista.
Emporium illustration from Disneyland Paris’ Emporium are scans from the unmissable Disneyland Paris: From Sketch to Reality by Alain Littaye

Only In… Disneyland Paris ! La Girafe Curieuse


Adventureland, in Paris is unique. Its inspiration doesn’t just come from the jungle environement commonly used in Kingdoms. This one takes a lot from a real continent : Africa. This store and its design is a real Disney jewel, but what many people don’t notice passing by this sandy outpost is the star itself : The Curious Giraffe.

She’s quietly ruminating right avove your head, while peeking inside this human store. The chewing effect still works perfectly ! 

It is located just left after you entered Adventureland. If you keep walking on the left you’ll get into the african side of the french Adventureland. The building has therefor also been put here to serve as a beacon of where you’re heading. 
The stores sells plushes and clothes all themed around the desert and the jungle. The sign shown above reads “Everything for safaris”.
Oh, and now you know how the french spell giraffe.

How many Restaurants ?

How many snacks, fast food, and fine dining every Kingdom holds ? This many.

Disneyland :
  • Table Service & Buffet : 4
  • Counter Service : 11
  • Stands & Snacks : 6

Magic Kingdom
  • Table Service & Buffet : 5
  • Counter Service : 9
  • Stands & Snacks : 14

Tokyo Disneyland 
  • Table Service & Buffet : 10
  • Counter Service: 13
  • Stands & Snacks : 13

Disneyland Paris
  • Table Service & Buffet : 6
  • Counter Service : 12
  • Stands & Snacks : 12

Hong Kong Disneyland 
  • Table Service & Buffet : 2
  • Counter Service : 6
  • Stands & Snacks : 4
Undeniably, for its incredible amount of table service locations, Tokyo wins and Hong Kong well, bring some oreos, just in case.

At its opening Disneyland Paris bare many more table service restaurants. It was even marketed as a fine food heaven. But as the park grew more in debt, fine restaurants, one by one,  slowly turned into cheaper quickest dining experiences, letting “Le Royaume” catch up its US and Asian brothers on the counter service figure.

As for the quality and themeing of all those places… That’s for many other articles…

Note : Stands & Snacks numbers vary regularly, I tried not to include the very small stands rarely mentioned and constantly poping up in different places.

4 City Hall

Intrigued or annoyed, cheerful or disapointed, worried or hungry those are the states of mind guests are in steping in the 4 City Halls of the 5 Magic Kingdoms.

In every Magic Kingdoms, you find them on your left entering the park. In the oldest and youngest Kingdoms the City Halls are quiet the same. As many already know Hong Kong Disneyland Main Street replicates the design of the Motherpark and only differs by the texture and color used to garnish the buildings. Buildings are therefor the very same shape. The city hall is not even different in color, only the roof tiles differ from the original.

Now as for Walt Disney World’s, it is like its Main Street, more New England inspired but poor in colors. Quiet richer and bigger than Disneyland’s as well. 
In Paris, the look is more a more general approach of American architecture : red bricks and slate shingle rooves. The one simiral to the American Pavillon in Epcot. The golden elements add some kind of refinement unique to this park along with the 4 sided clock bell tower. Orlando is the only other City Hall to give time to guests.
In Tokyo they don’t really have a City Hall, they have an information point called Main Street House. It is not a singled out building but mainly a store on the front side of the World Bazaar structure. I didn’t think it was relevant to this article. 
Disney’s City Hall always fascinated me because they include in the Kingdom theme the idea of an administration that supervise the magic. They stand out on your left like the information and help anchor of your Kingdom. 
Only in Disneyland and Walt Disney World can you have your picture taken with the mayor though, I’ve never seen that big belly in Paris. 
Credits : Magic Kingdom Park’s City Hall picture is from Flickr user Still Burning

3 Tea Parties and 2 Hatter Tea Cups

They seem to be the essence, the simplest attraction and yet of the defining experience of any Magic Kingdom. They can be a gentle swirl as well the craziest spin !
This article is about the 5 Mad Tea Party attractions of the 5 Magic Kingdoms.
This title was not easy to come up with and certainly doesn’t flatter your humble servant but with 4 versions all called differently, something had to suffer : this was the title. But have I written it well, it would have turned out like that : 
2 Mad Tea Party, 1 Alice’s Tea Party, 1 Mad Hatter’s Tea Cups, and 1 Mad Hatter Tea Cups.
For various reasons, only Disneyland and Magic Kingdom park used the same name. All other three parks had to altere it in someway. Tokyo more expressively attached it to Alice, Paris in a curious anglophonic move linked it more directly to the funny Mad Hatter, and Hong Kong simply removed the possesive mark which seemed confusing enough in the french speaking Disneyland.
Early pre-1955 concept show the ride much richer, with the birthday party happening right in the middle of the spin, and lanterns hanging from the dancing in the air. Unfortunately, the ride ended up much lighter. Cups were fancily decorated, though not all of them, and lanterns were striped.
It was born rather naked, and moved away for the arrival of the new Fantasyland. Since then, Disneyland’s orignal bares more decorations, like the lanterns it was once deprived of. 
In every Magic Kingdom but one, the Cups were part of the initial package. In Disneyland, Walt Disney World, Disneyland Paris and Hong Kong Disneyland the were all present on opening day even though the US versions eventually had to change locations. Awkardly, when aranging placemaking for Walt Disney World’s new Fantasyland, the cups had to be pushed out of the land and on Tomorrowland ground. Only there can you watch Indy Speedway while waiting for your cup. In every park though, they sit on the right angle of Fantasyland triangle that trace Dumbo, the Cups, and the Carroussel at the lower corner.

Only Tokyo didn’t get its cups intitialy, they got it later on in 1986. It was actually the first new attraction added to the restort after its 1983 opening. In 1998 this asian replica of the Orlando version got a major facelift along their own Fantasyland redesign. It is now richer in detail and fancier than’t its Floridian counterpart.

In Disneyland, Mad Tea Party lays naked in the california sun, only there do the cups spin in the open. Moving it to Florida, because of shower storm the attraction had to be topped, so it did in rainy Tokyo and Paris, and eventualy in Hong Kong. Those four canopies are the major distinction between cups. 
In Walt Disney World and Hong Kong Disneyland, the marquee is rather bulk. Magic Kingdom’s canopy is dwarfed by the big trees above it. Both their design are very simple.  Tokyo’s new version is definitely more sophisticated even though it doesn’t compete with the Disney grandeur of the 90’s. Once again, Europe was lucky with that one. It’s all glass and ironwork. Description would get 4/5 of the Disney fans jealous, I’ll let the pictures explain. Inside the canopy, big hard lanterns hang still above the cups in every 5 Kingdoms. Disneyland being open air, they are attached to garden strings which allow a gentle sway.
 
Under the canopy (or the sky) every attractions bears the same mecanics of 3 rotating discs on wich 6 cups spins on an their axis, making a total of 18 cups. Interstingly, walking on Disneyland version it seems smaller than the other ones. This effect is due to the absence of roof. In every other locations, the canopy confine you into a unique area where laughters and shouts resonate such as in a big indoor attraction. You are therefor isolated from Fantasyland and feel like experiencing a major attraction rather than just the C ticket it actually is.
Alice's Tea Party

Tokyo Cups
This “atmosphere” is help by the theming of the surroundings. In 4 or the Magic Kingdoms, a giant tea pot from which the famous Dormouse sicks out his head accompany the guest. In Tokyo and Orlando, Dormouse joins the guest as they spin for the pot stands in the center of the attraction. In Paris and Hong Kong the pot and its mouse entertain the guest still waiting in the queue. Disneyland doesn’t serve its tea with a giant pot, only with the lifesize topiaries shared by all 5 versions.
Though a very simple and common attracion in many non-disney parks, here again, the theme gave it the excellence it bares today. You don’t just ride a spiner, you ride in a giant cup ! Alice or the Mad Hatter no matter whose cups are, there always one of the must do, and most reknowned attraction in every Magic Kingdoms. 
Very few know their local complicated name, but whoever has stepped once into a Disney park is gonna know what you’re talking about when you mention “The Cups”. 
And that’s what makes it a Magic Kingdom icon.

Edit : It appears my history was wrong, Walt Disney World Mad Tea Party openned roofless and was covered only after the redesign of Fantasyland. Evidence can be found here.
Thanks for the commenting user ;)
Credits :
Tokyo’s Cups picture is from Life’s a long journey