True... unfortunately, I think we're seeing a lot of rehabs to the benefit of operation costs. I'm also, not too crazy about stitch, but it took an attraction that was hit or miss for some guests, and made it family friendly. Monsters, Inc. definitely created magical and memorable moments for guests during the year of a million dreams, which was definitely what they were shooting for...Future Guy wrote:I have no problem with rehabbing old rides and making them better. I just hate to see something good made worse. Take the Imagination pavilion: the sole reason that it was rehabbed in the first place was because it was one of the most expensive pavilions to operate. The object of the rehab was not to make it better, but to make it cheaper to run. Disney really gave their customers the raw end of the deal on this one.
With some of the other rehabs, though, I'm of two minds. The Seas With Nemo and His Computer-Generated Friends doesn't fit in with my idea of what EPCOT should be, but when I visited in 2007 the new Seas pavilion was more crowded than I've seen it since 1986 when The Living Seas first opened. I don't like Test Track, but I'm definitely in the minority there, since it seems to be pretty popular. And anyway, the blame for that one can be laid at GM's feet, since it was their clueless management who insisted that World of Motion 2.0 be a more automobile-centric attraction.
As for the Magic Kingdom, it's pretty much Licensed Character land. The Monsters Inc. Laugh Floor is probably the best show ever to occupy that space, and it's obvious that Disney spent a serious amount of money on it--a halfway job it was not. I'm not crazy about Stitch's Great Escape, but it's more family-friendly than Alien Encounter. Honestly, I preferred Mission To Mars, but for today's audiences it'd be a real snoozefest.
As for the Horizons thing, I think that the sinkhole story is pretty credible. Why else would Disney go to the expense of tearing down the building? Most rehabs are simply worked into an existing building and ride system, after all. The Mission:Space building is considerably smaller than the Horizons pavilion was; it probably doesn't rest on the sinkhole at all.
As for Horizons, yeah, I know its a rumor, but sinkholes happen quite often in this state. The swampy marsh that Disney is built on, coupled with the weight of a heavier than average building, built before strict codes probably just warranted a rebuild in their eyes. I'd believe that was (at least one of) the reasons for the rebuild. Plus, some site somewhere on the net has the satellite image timeline of the Mission:Space Build, and I can tell you from experience that the Machinery for the attraction was built a level below the park level. They could have filled in the hole, supported it to todays building codes, then built a much smaller building on top of it.