With the MGM layoffs... resorts are not doing well.
Disney has been smart to not open very many, but I now imagine a scenario where many don’t open for a few years now.
Disney has been smart to not open very many, but I now imagine a scenario where many don’t open for a few years now.
Taking a guess that a lot of those 1,000 are room service positions. When the new position is "we clean the room once then let it sit a day" no need for tons of staff to clean rooms daily.
Port Orleans French Quarter closed for about 7 months after 9/11. I don't think any resorts closed during the great recession. Once tourism from foreign countries is allowed again (as in they are allowed to come here, not that we'll allow them in) I fully expect resorts to fully reopen.
I mean.
All predictions, based on best case scenario, is not really eradicating the virus/vaccinating enough people across the world for heard immunity until maybe late ‘21 early ‘22... so being realistic, full tourism can resume by then, and then it will take time to recover. So I do expect full recovery to take several years here.
Non-essential travel restrictions are being lifted as we speak between a lot of countries. Vaccinations or herd immunity are not required for that. I just don't know what to say to people who are expecting this to be bad for years and years.
I’m no economic guru, but wouldn’t it be a cool incentive to boost hotel bookings if they offered cheaper stays at some of their deluxe resorts for the next x amount of months, rather than just shutting it down?This is wild. I would’ve assumed that the Poly was one of the most likely hotels to stay open.
I wonder if we’ll see Disney close hotels along every price point like Universal did. Disney might just close Deluxe hotels
While they're at it, how bout they use this time to fix the entire Monorail system.They took advantage of a bad situation to finally fix things. I know the monorail station is falling apart, and that alone would require closing the Great Ceremonial House since the entrance is beneath it.
The Poly is 50 years old and has MANY problems that have had bandaids applied for years now. They took advantage of a bad situation to finally fix things. I know the monorail station is falling apart, and that alone would require closing the Great Ceremonial House since the entrance is beneath it. Those guests who wanted to stay there can easily be upgraded to the Contemporary or Grand Flo.
The south wing is absolute garbage - it’s probably in worse shape than the tower on the whole.How's the Contemporary structurally? It seems like it'd be a bit stronger in design yet harder to repair.
Hopefully they ARE using this time for increased maintenance and not just parking the trains to save money.Contemporary as far as I know is STRUCTURALLY sound, but the plumbing and other systems are all showing their age. If you're ever in the Monorail station at the Contemporary look over at the windows-- there's always at least one room that's leaking water into the floor below. Pipes only last so long, and they're just wearing out with age. I know that the Contemporary had to install a boiler a couple of years ago because the co-generation steam pipes from the RCES plant behind MK had deteriorated over time.
As for the Monorail, the current situation with the EPCOT line closed and reduced daily hours actually means the trains are getting some much needed work. Having 9, 10, or 11 of the 12 trains running every day for almost 20 hours a day meant little to no preventative maintenance could be done. Having 3-4 trains out of service each day and 8 hours of downtime each night means they can fix things at long last.