A First Look at the Walt Disney Studios Paris
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A Map of Disneyland Paris and the Studios
(c) Disney
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The Wait Was Over
However, 1997 came and went. There was no announcement of a second park and the management
team in charge at EuroDisney never uttered a single word about the next phase. We had to
wait until 1999 for the first indicator of the new timetable for construction. The company
began to shop for new loans and request reinvestment from their pool of members. The plan
had always been to build a Studios modelled on the successful television, movie and
animation theme park in Florida, but the imagineers were keen to emphasise the importance
of Europe in the creation of the cinema and trace the history of European cinema rather
than produce a carbon copy of the Hollywood depicted in Walt Disney World. The name
MGM will be ominously missing from the name of the theme park to distance the
park from Hollywood at a time when European leaders are encouraging investment in domestic
entertainment product to prevent the dilution of the overall product by the Hollywood
studios. This is of great irony when The Walt Disney Company is the highest grossing
global entertainment giant at the multiplex.
In addition, the company did not have a blank check to build a second theme park. The management team knew from Day One that it was the key to sending guest spending through the roof and extending guests visits to the resort, encouraging them to stay in the company-owned hotels. The original park had added minor new attractions and parades in an attempt to persuade visitors that the park needed more than just a day visit - even during off-peak - over the timeframe of a decade, but the Studios was essential for the long term viability of the resort as a whole. The Company set aside around $500 million to build the park, a far cry from the reputed $1.6 billion assigned by the Oriental Land Company to achieve the same objective at their Tokyo Disney Resort. However, as Tokyo Disney Sea will open with more than 20 major attractions, the Walt Disney Studios Paris will open with just 9 and, once again, the emphasis is on shows. As any observer of Disney theme parks will note, guests will often wait an hour plus to enter a theatre for a show lasting around 30 minutes. This ties up significantly more of the guests time within the park than a 3 minute attraction. With the FastPass innovation reducing wait times across Disney theme parks, the EuroDisney team knew the key to making guests spend an extra day at the complex was shows.
Main Entrance
The huge gates welcoming guests to the park are reminiscent of the grand entrances to the
Hollywood Studios of the twenties and thirties. The turnstiles are not yet in place but
will be in the smaller archways on either side of the logo title arch. Once through the
gates, guests will encounter a picturesque courtyard with the Studio Store on their left,
a smaller version of Disneylands Emporium store with Guest Services and another
store on the right. Off to the left is a reproduction of Disney-MGM Studios famous
landmark, the Earffel Tower which here displays the name of the Paris park. However, it is
the covered stoundstage looming directly in front of the courtyard that signals the real
beginning of guests adventure at the Studios. Perhaps reeling from the decision not
to copy Tokyo Disneylands covered World Bazaar, built under a huge glass and iron
canopy due to the monsoonal autumns and cold winters in Japan and cover DLPs Main
Street U.S.A., this building is the Main Street of the Studios. Inside Lights,
Camera, Hollywood, guests will experience a series of restaurants and boutiques
under the lights of a soundstage designed after Walt Disneys first studio. Expect a
great deal of infamous Streetmosphere inside this attraction. The interior is
themed after the Golden Age of the movies, so expect Art Deco design throughout.