Disney's Polynesian Village Resort

Disney's Polynesian Village Resort
Location Magic Kingdom Resort Area
Resort type Deluxe Resort
Opened October 1, 1971 (1971-10-01)
Theme South Seas
Areas Rarotonga, Niue, Samoa, Hawaii, Tuvalu, Fiji, Aotearoa, Tonga
Rooms 492 rooms
Suites Standard Suite, Honeymoon Jr. Suite, Princess Suite, Ambassador Suite, King Kamehameha Suite
Green lodge yes
Disney's Polynesian Villas and Bungalows
Location Magic Kingdom Resort Area
Resort type Disney Vacation Club Resort
Opened April 1, 2015 (2015-04-01)
Theme South Seas
Areas Moorea, Pago Pago, Tokelau, Bora Bora
Rooms 380
Suites None
Green lodge yes

Disney's Polynesian Village Resort (formerly the Polynesian Resort from 1985 to 2014)[1] is a Disney owned and operated AAA Four-Diamond Award–winning[2] resort located at the Walt Disney World Resort. It began operation on October 1, 1971 as one of Walt Disney World Resort's first two on-site hotels. The resort has a South Seas theme, and originally opened with 492 rooms.[3] It was designed by Welton Becket and Associates and constructed by US Steel Realty Development. The resort is owned and operated by Walt Disney Parks and Resorts.

Since its opening in 1971, the resort has seen three major expansions; the first in 1978, with the addition of a longhouse, the Tangaroa Terrace restaurant/support facility, and a secondary pool. A second expansion took place in 1985, with the construction of two additional longhouses. In that same year, the resort adopted the shortened name "Disney's Polynesian Resort". On May 2, 2014, it was announced that the resort would revert to the Disney's Polynesian Village Resort title while expanding further to include Disney Vacation Club accommodations as well as enhanced resort amenities. On April 1, 2015, the third expansion officially opened, including the new DVC additions and other amenities around the resort.[4]

Design

A white sand beach off of Disney's Polynesian Village Resort, with the Tuvalu Longhouse in view.

Disney's Polynesian Village Resort is situated on the southern shore of the manmade Seven Seas Lagoon, south of Magic Kingdom and adjacent to other Walt Disney World complexes, with the Transportation and Ticket Center to the east and Disney's Grand Floridian Resort & Spa to the west.[5] The resort is on the Magic Kingdom monorail loop, providing transportation to the Magic Kingdom and Epcot (via transfer), and is part of the route for Disney's Magic Kingdom Resorts Water Launch service.[6] Other Walt Disney World Resort theme parks and attractions are served by Disney Transport buses.[6]

The Great Ceremonial House featured a large "tropical rainforest" in its atrium with waterfalls up until 2014.

The resort is organized around a central building named the Great Ceremonial House, itself designed after a Tahitian royal assembly lodge.[7] The Great Ceremonial House houses guest services and most of the resort's dining and merchandise locations. From its opening until 2014, the Great Ceremonial House also featured an expansive tropical waterfall feature in its atrium, with over 75 species of plant life.[8] The waterfall and foliage were removed and replaced, however, during extensive resort renovations due to health and safety concerns and to reimagine the lobby as a social space.[9] No rooms are contained in this building, instead several lodges - longhouses - and water bungalows house all guest rooms and are spread out amongst resort property.

As of 2008, Disney's Polynesian Village Resort is certified green lodging property with the state of Florida.[10]

Original design and construction

Longhouses, such as the Tahiti Longhouse viewed here from the Seven Seas Lagoon, house all of the resort's rooms.

The resort used United States Steel's then newly developed construction process for its original longhouses;[11] steel frames were erected on-site, and pre-constructed modular rooms were lifted into these frames via crane, similar to Disney's Contemporary Resort.[11] This method of building caused problems in both Disney's Polynesian and Contemporary Resorts, with guest complaints of a moldy smell in their rooms. It was found that mold and debris had collected in the spaces between each room. The spaces were filled in, stopping the problem, and Longhouses built as part of the resort's later expansions were built using conventional building techniques.

With newly found construction photos of the Polynesian Resort found, the rooms were done differently than the Contemporary. The Polynesian Resort, the Contemporary Resort, and the Court of Flags Resort all had the rooms built off site. The difference was instead of sliding the rooms into a metal frame like the Contemporary, they stacked the rooms and built the frame/concrete around them. Actual construction photos showing the stacking system

Accommodations

The resort design and layout consists of 11 two and three story longhouses, spread throughout the property. The resort originally opened with 8 longhouses, Bali Hai, Bora Bora, Fiji, Hawaii, Maui, Samoa, Tahiti and Tonga. In 1978, the Oahu longhouse was added. The Moorea and Pago Pago longhouses were added in 1985. Between 2013 and 2015, 20 over-the-water DVC bungalows were constructed in a new area named Bora Bora.

On October 28, 1999, most of the resort's longhouses were renamed. Today the longhouses are named for islands on the Polynesian isle map, with chosen longhouse names matching the relative geographic position of their namesake island(s). Ten of the eleven longhouses, excluding Fiji, were renamed: Bali Hai became Tonga; Bora Bora became Niue; Hawaii became Samoa; Maui became Rarotonga; Moorea became Tahiti; Oahu became Tokelau; Pago Pago became Rapa Nui; Samoa became Tuvalu; Tahiti became Aotearoa and Tonga became Hawaii. The 2013-15 resort reimagining has returned the original names of the DVC longhouses.

A standard guest room with two queen beds, after the resort's 2006 renovation.

Two of the current longhouses, Hawaii (formerly Tonga) and Tonga (formerly Bali Hai), offer a Concierge Lounge - where refreshments, views, and lounge space are offered exclusively to guests of Hawaii or Tonga.

Dining

Disney's Polynesian Village Resort is home to several dining locations.

Shopping

The resort offers several shopping areas focused on Disney parks merchandise, resort-specific specialty merchandise, and convenience items, located in the Great Ceremonial House. BouTiki is located off the main lobby, with Moana Mercantile located opposite Kona Cafe on the second floor. Trader Sam's Grog Grotto also offers a limited range of merchandise.

Recreation

The Lava Pool is the resort's main themed pool, featuring zero-entry, a water slide and water play area.
A former logo of Disney's Polynesian Village Resort.

Disney's Polynesian Village Resort features two swimming pools, a marina, a supervised children's activity center, and a shared spa and health club.

Disney's Polynesian Villas & Bungalows

On September 17, 2013 Disney Vacation Club announced that its planned next location will be at Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort. The first phase of DVC expansion to the resort opened April 1, 2015,[4] adding 20 over-the-water 'Bora Bora' Bungalows and converting 2 existing buildings (Moorea (formerly Tahiti), Pago Pago (formerly Rapa Nui)) into Deluxe Studios. The Tokelau conversion was completed mid-2015 creating a total of 360 Deluxe Studios between the 3 buildings.[13][14] Between the three DVC longhouses is a barbecue area for the use of resort guests, with two gas barbecues. In addition there will be 5 new rooms added between the Moorea, Tokelau and Pago Pago vacation club buildings.

Role in ending The Beatles

John Lennon signed the paperwork that officially broke up The Beatles at the Polynesian Resort on December 29, 1974.[15]

John, Julian, and I (May Pang) left New York the following day to spend Christmas in Florida. On December 29, 1974, the voluminous documents were brought down to John in Florida by one of Apple's lawyers. He finally picked up his pen and, in the unlikely backdrop of the Polynesian Village Hotel at Disney World, ended the greatest rock 'n' roll band in history by simply scrawling John Lennon at the bottom of the page.
May Pang, Instamatic Karma (St. Martins, 2008)

References

  1. Walt Disney World, The First Decade. Walt Disney Productions. 1982. p. 92. ASIN B000UV4K46.
  2. "AAA Four Diamond Hotels" (PDF). AAA. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
  3. 1 2 "The Polynesian Village Resort". Widen Your World. Retrieved 2008-05-28.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Disney’s Polynesian Villas & Bungalows Makes its Grand Opening Debut at Walt Disney World Resort". Disney Parks Blog. Retrieved 2015-04-01.
  5. "Walt Disney World Trip Planning Guide, Polynesian Resort". MousePlanet. Retrieved 2008-05-28.
  6. 1 2 "Transportation FAQ". Walt Disney World Resort. Retrieved 2008-05-28.
  7. "Tikiman's Unofficial Polynesian Resort Webpage - Aloha". Steve Seifert. Retrieved 2008-05-28.
  8. "Disney's Polynesian Resort". the Dibb. Retrieved 2008-05-28.
  9. "Walt Disney World unveils new Polynesian Village Resort lobby look with more seating, smaller waterfall". Inside the Magic.
  10. "Green Lodging Program Designated Properties". Florida Departmental of Environmental Protection. Retrieved 2008-05-28.
  11. 1 2 "History of the World, Part VI". MousePlanet. Retrieved 2008-05-28.
  12. "Lilo's Playhouse Recreation". Disney. Retrieved 2015-02-05.
  13. "Disney adding Vacation Club time shares to Polynesian". Orlando Sentinel.
  14. Tim Krasniewski. "Sales permit granted for Disney's Polynesian Villas & Bungalows". dvcnews.com.
  15. Pang, May (2008). Instamatic Karma: Photographs of John Lennon. Macmillan. p. 118. ISBN 9781429993975. Retrieved 7 April 2015.

External links

Preceding station   Walt Disney World Monorail   Following station
Magic Kingdom
Resort line
One-way operation

Coordinates: 28°24′21″N 81°35′03″W / 28.4057°N 81.5843°W / 28.4057; -81.5843

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