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EPCOT

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Disney theme park
Epcot logo
200px
Spaceship Earth is the icon of Epcot''
Epcot
Location Lake Buena Vista, Florida, USA
Opening Day October 1, 1982
Resort Walt Disney World Resort
Theme Technology, innovation and internationality
Website [Epcot's homepage]
Operator The Walt Disney Company

Spaceship Earth is the symbol of Epcot. Mickey's magic wand and the Walt Disney World monorail track are visible beside it.
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Spaceship Earth is the symbol of Epcot. Mickey's magic wand and the Walt Disney World monorail track are visible beside it.

Epcot is the second theme park built at the Walt Disney World Resort near Orlando, Florida, USA. It was dedicated to international culture and technological innovation. It opened on October 1, 1982, and was originally named EPCOT Center from 1982 to 1993. Based on square footage, it was the largest Disney theme park in the world until 1998, when Disney's Animal Kingdom opened.

History

The planned community

The name Epcot derives from the acronym EPCOT (Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow), a utopian city of the future planned by Walt Disney. (He sometimes used the word "City" instead of "Community" when expanding the acronym). In Walt Disney's words: "EPCOT ... will take its cue from the new ideas and new technologies that are now emerging from the creative centers of American industry. It will be a community of tomorrow that will never be completed, but will always be introducing and testing and demonstrating new materials and systems. And EPCOT will always be a showcase to the world for the ingenuity and imagination of American free enterprise."

Walt Disney's original vision of EPCOT was for a model community, home to twenty thousand residents, which would be a test bed for city planning and organization. The community was to have been built in the shape of a circle, with businesses and commercial areas at its center, community buildings and schools and recreational complexes around it, and residential neighborhoods along the perimeter. Transportation would have been provided by monorails and PeopleMovers (like the one in the Magic Kingdom's Tomorrowland). Automobile traffic would be kept underground, leaving pedestrians safe above-ground. Walt Disney said, "It will be a planned, controlled community, a showcase for American industry and research, schools, cultural and educational opportunities. In EPCOT there will be no slum areas because we won't let them develop. There will be no landowners and therefore no voting control. People will rent houses instead of buying them, and at modest rentals. There will be no retirees; everyone must be employed." The original model of this original vision of EPCOT can still be seen by passengers riding the Tomorrowland Transit Authority attraction in the Magic Kingdom park; when the PeopleMover enters the showhouse for Stitch's Great Escape, the model is visible on the left (when facing forward) behind glass.

This vision was not realized. Walt Disney wasn't able to obtain funding and permission to start work on his Florida property until he agreed to build the Magic Kingdom first, and he died before its opening day. The Walt Disney Company later decided that it didn't want to be in the business of running a town. (The model community of Celebration, Florida has been mentioned as a realization of Disney's original vision, but Celebration is based on concepts of new urbanism which is radically different from Disney's modernist and futurist visions.) However, the idea of EPCOT was instrumental in prompting the state of Florida to create the Reedy Creek Improvement District (RCID) and the Cities of Bay Lake and Reedy Creek (soon renamed Lake Buena Vista), a legislative mechanism which allows the Walt Disney Company to exercise governmental powers over Walt Disney World. Control over the RCID is vested in the landowners of the district, and the promise of an actual city in the district would have meant that the powers of the RCID would have been distributed among the landowners in EPCOT. Because the idea of EPCOT was never implemented, the Disney Corporation remained almost the sole landowner in the district allowing it to maintain control of the RCID and the cities of Bay Lake and Lake Buena Vista. Disney's intent appears to be that it wishes to keep the RCID as an instrument of the company, as witnessed by the method by which the RCID redrew its boundaries to exclude Celebration rather than allow Celebration's resident landowners to dilute Disney's control over the RCID.

The theme park

The landscape of Epcot includes lots of water, grassy slopes, and many trees.
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The landscape of Epcot includes lots of water, grassy slopes, and many trees.

The Epcot theme park was originally known as EPCOT Center to reflect the fact that the park was built to embody the ideals and values of EPCOT the city. In 1994, the name was changed to Epcot '94 and subsequently Epcot '95 a year later. By 1996, the park was known simply as Epcot, a non-acronym, mixed-case word, as the park no longer reflected Walt Disney's plans for a futuristic city.

The original plans for the park showed indecision over what the park's purpose was to be: some Imagineers wanted it to represent the cutting edge of technology, while others wanted it to showcase international cultures and customs. At one point a model of the futuristic park was pushed together against a model of the international park, and EPCOT Center was born - a theme park with the flavor of a World's Fair.

Epcot is generally regarded as more "learning-oriented" than other theme parks. It has only three thrill rides (Test Track, Mission: SPACE, and Soarin'); the rest of its attractions are dark rides, shows, or walkthrough exhibits. Epcot's Future World is showing its age; the exhibits there no longer represent the most modern advances in technology. A plan code-named "Project Gemini", once rumored to exist, would have changed Future World into "Discoveryland," changed its theme to the idea of discovery, reduced the pressure to keep everything cutting-edge, and added a few more thrill rides. "Project Gemini" was simply a hypothetical project that, when leaked to the internet community became regarded by many as fact. It simply never was.

Epcot is also regarded today as the quintessential park of the 1980's. There are many who feel the park is severely outdated. On the other hand there are many who enjoy the nostalgia as there has been a growing trend toward interest in 1980's culture. To showcase this growing trend Epcot has a performance troupe in the Future World area perform many New Wave hits from the 80's on synthesizer instruments. The troupe dresses in Duran Duran- and A Flock Of Seagulls-esque clothing and also peforms many Disney songs.

Various satirical expansions of the acronym EPCOT have emerged over time, such as "Every Person Comes Out Tired" (because of the amount of walking required in the park), "Every Pocketbook Comes Out Thinner," "Evil Polyester Costumes Of Torture" (which refers to the puppets in the Tapestry of Nations and Tapestry of Dreams that created back problems from many Cast Members)(this satirical acronym actually predates the Tapestry of Nations parade by more than a decade and refers to the costumes of most Cast Members throughout Walt Disney World, as polyester is not very comfortable in the Florida humidity), "Every Paycheck Comes On Thursday" (the pay day for Disney Cast Members), "Eisner Puts Cash On Table" (in light of the high admission price to the Disney parks, and former Disney CEO Michael Eisner's reported 40 million dollar bonuses in the 1990s), "Eisner's Personal Coin-Operated Toy," and "Eisner's Personal Cash On Tap."

Opening day

October 1, 1982 was a grand opening day celebration with international performing groups representing countries from all over the world with and without pavilions in World Showcase. Water was gathered from major rivers all over the world and emptied into the lagoon from ceremonial containers to mark the opening. Located at the front of the park is a plaque bearing its opening-day dedication:

Facts and figures

Park layout

The park consists of two sections: Future World and World Showcase. Both are patterned after the kinds of exhibits which were popular at World's Fairs in the first two-thirds of the 20th century, in particular the 1939 New York World's Fair. Epcot has become essentially a permanent display of the world's nations.

Future World

See also: List of current Epcot attractions

Future World consists of a variety of pavilions that explore innovative aspects and applications of technology.

The Fountain of Nations, which contains water from 22 nations
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The Fountain of Nations, which contains water from 22 nations

Mission: SPACE is a simulated trip to Mars in a spacecraft of the future.
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Mission: SPACE is a simulated trip to Mars in a spacecraft of the future.



A photo of the interior of The Land Pavillion's hot air balloons.
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A photo of the interior of The Land Pavillion's hot air balloons.

Each Future World pavilion was initially sponsored by a corporation who helped fund its construction and maintenance in return for the corporation's logos appearing prominently throughout the pavilion. For example, Universe of Energy was sponsored by Exxon, and The Land was sponsored by Kraft, then Nestlé. Each pavilion contains a posh "VIP area" for its sponsor with offices, lounges, and reception areas hidden away from regular park guests. In the years since the park's opening, however, some sponsors have decided that the branding wasn't worth the cost of sponsorship and have pulled out, leaving some of the pavilions without sponsors. Disney prefers to have sponsors helping to pay the bills, so pavilions without sponsors have an uncertain future. After General Electric left Horizons in 1993, it closed for several years, operating only on rare occasions. It was ultimately demolished in 2000 to make room for Mission: SPACE. After MetLife abandoned Wonders of Life in 2001, that area operated seasonally, until it ultimately closed. Test Track is sponsored by General Motors, and is sponsored by Hewlett-Packard. Spaceship Earth was sponsored by AT&T from the park's opening until early 2004. It is now sponsored by Siemens.

World Showcase

See also List of current Epcot attractions

The World Showcase Lagoon during IllumiNations: Reflections of Earth
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The World Showcase Lagoon during IllumiNations: Reflections of Earth

Interior shot of the Mexico Pavilion
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Interior shot of the Mexico Pavilion

Norway Pavilion
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Norway Pavilion

China Pavilion
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China Pavilion

Germany Pavilion
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Germany Pavilion

An actor pretends to be a statue outside the Italian pavilion
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An actor pretends to be a statue outside the Italian pavilion
Italy Pavilion
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Italy Pavilion
The Japanese pavilion features taiko drum shows.
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The Japanese pavilion features taiko drum shows.
France Pavilion
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France Pavilion

World Showcase is made up of eleven pavilions: in clockwise order, Mexico, Norway, China, Germany, Italy, United States of America, Japan, Morocco, France, the United Kingdom, and Canada. Of the eleven countries, Norway and Morocco were not present at the park's opening, and were added later. Each of these contains representative shops and restaurants and is staffed by citizens of these countries. Some also contain rides and shows. Each pavilion is sponsored (and paid for) by the country it represents, so tourism brochures are readily available. The sponsorship also explains why pavilions for Russia, Spain, and Israel never made it past the planning phase: these countries declined to fund pavilions. An Equatorial Africa pavilion was planned and part of it was built. It is now known as Outpost. After Disney's Animal Kingdom - an African themed animal preserve and park - opened, any plans for an African Pavilion were dropped.

To cut costs, Disney now opens World Showcase late (usually 11:00 AM) and closes Future World early (usually 7:00 PM, except for Test Track, , Spaceship Earth, and Soarin' which sometimes remain open until park closing). Unlike the Magic Kingdom, which does not serve alcohol, many stores and restaurants in the World Showcase do serve or sell alcoholic beverages from their respective countries, and beer is sold at refreshment stands throughout the park.

A thirteen-minute fireworks show takes place in the World Showcase Lagoon every night at the park's closing time (usually 9:00 PM). Fireworks and lasers fill the sky above an immense rotating globe whose continents show changing pictures of culture and technology throughout the ages, while a rousing musical score plays over the loudspeakers. The current show is titled and premiered as part of the park's millennium celebration in 2000. The show tells the story of Earth and is divided into three movements titled "Chaos," "Order," and "Meaning." The music has an African tribal sound to it, to emphasize the idea of humanity as a single unified tribe on this planet; the lagoon is surrounded by twenty large torches signifying the past twenty centuries, and the show culminates in the globe opening like a lotus blossom to reveal a twenty-first torch, representing the new century.

There is an entrance to the park between the France and United Kingdom Pavillions known as the International Gateway. Guests staying in a number of the Epcot Resorts and guests at the Disney Studio's can access this gate by walkway or boat.

Pavilions in the World Showcase

Mexico
Norway
China
Germany
Italy
The American Adventure
America Gardens Theatre

Across from the pavilion is the American Gardens Theater, an outdoor amphitheater. The American Gardens Theater hosts concerts, singers, and bands from around the world. Many entertainment acts from around the world perform on this stage. The American Gardens theatre has hosted huge amount of shows since it was built. Over the years some of the more famous shows include Blast!, Barrage, and many 1960's bands (such as Davy Jones from The Monkees) who bring back the old days each year at the Flower Power concert series, a part of the Epcot Flower and Garden show (held each spring).In 1999 The best of Michael Flatley's Lord of the Dance performed in the theater over the summer. Even though dance master Michael Flatley did not perform in the show, it was still a summer hit in Epcot. In 2000 the show was brought back by popular demand for another summer run. Originally the theatre did not have a covered stage but was open air the stage cover (and backstage dressing and show equipment areas) were added during a refurbishment that was completed before the inception of a Barbie stage show.

Japan
Morocco
image:Epcot_maroco.JPG image:Epcot_Maroco1.JPG image:Epcot_maroco2.JPG

France

United Kingdom
Canada

Timeline

See also

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
[media]

Walt Disney Parks and Resorts
Disneyland Resort:

Disneyland > Disney's California Adventure
Walt Disney World Resort:

Magic Kingdom > Epcot | Disney-MGM Studios | Disney's Animal Kingdom
Tokyo Disney Resort:

Tokyo Disneyland > Tokyo DisneySea
Disneyland Resort Paris:

Disneyland Park | Walt Disney Studios
Hong Kong Disneyland Resort:

Hong Kong Disneyland
Disney Cruise Line:

Disney Wonder > Disney Magic | Castaway Cay
Disney Regional Entertainment:

ESPN Zone
Disney Vacation Club | Adventures by Disney | World of Disney
Walt Disney Imagineering: Walt Disney Creative Entertainment

 


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