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Magic Kingdom Secrets: Things 99% of Guests Don't Know

by: chip_and_dale!( 4622Feedback score is 1000 to 4,999) Top 25 Reviewer
1434 out of 1462 people found this guide helpful.
Guide viewed: 33327 times Tags: Magic Kingdom | Disney | Florida | Disney Pins | pin


Walt Disney World is a "magical" place, but it's even more so than you think.  There are many hidden jewels, insider jokes and small details that the vast majority of Guests to the parks see but never comprehend.  I'm going to give you 10 of them, so the next time you go into the Magic Kingdom, you'll be able to tell people "the story behind the magic."

1. The Magic Kingdom Was Created as a Movie Theater

When the Magic Kingdom was created, its entrance and Main Street USA was created as a tribute to and in similarity to the old-fashioned movie theater.

Disney purposely placed the facade and railroad up high in front, so that from the moment you pass through the initial gates you can't see anything inside the park.  Instead, you see the "marquee" of flowers across the front.  As you pass through the tunnels under the railroad, you'll see large posters of various rides and attractions (upcoming movies).  Usually on the left entrance side, just inside the park, there's a popcorn stand.  Why?  It doesn't sell that much popcorn.  It's for the SMELL...that smell you get when you enter a theater's lobby.

As you walk down Main Street toward the Castle, look at the names of the businesses in the 2nd and 3rd story windows.  These are the Opening Credits...the names of the people who made both the Magic Kingdom and the Disney Company great.  And when you pass that, you're at the Castle and the park's hub - the Main Attraction - and the magic officially starts.

2. Entering the Park / Leaving the Park

Disney used every trick in the book to make a more magical experience for Guests.

If you notice on the way into the Magic Kingdom down Main Street, you're walking slightly uphill.  In addition, the Castle is built in such a way that it seems further away than it really is (that's through an architectural trick called Forced Perspective)...it builds excitement as you work your way into the main hub of the park.

But on the way out - when people are worn after a long day - having a slight downhill path makes the exit smoother and less tiring.  In addition, the Railway Station at the entrance was built in a reversed Forced Perspective from the Castle...it looks larger than it actually is, giving Guests the feeling that they're really closer to the exit than they are (so they feel less tired).

3. One Secret of the Haunted Mansion

Disney's animators and designers were avid chess players - and kept chess boards at work - so it made sense that their love of chess would work their way into the design of the Magic Kingdom.

While the Haunted Mansion was being designed, as a joke, one of the designers topped the model of the Haunted Mansion with chess pieces, just to see if anyone noticed.  When the joke was discovered, Walt decided to keep the joke going and told the designers, keep the chess pieces on the mansion.

Next time you approach the Haunted Mansion, look at the many spires.  Each one is shaped like a chess piece.

4. Sagging Hinges in Liberty Square

Disney's attention to historical detail is amazing.  Most people don't even wonder why the shutters on the windows of buildings in Liberty Square sag.

At the time of the Revolutionary War,  Britain refused to sell weapons and ammunition to the Colonists.  But the Brits saw no problem in selling the Colonists hinges...after all, shutters were essential to the construction of houses in those days.

The Colonists would take the hinges - as well as the hinges already used on their homes' shutters - and would melt the metal to create shot for their guns.  They substituted hinges made of leather to hold the shutters in place.  While this was a noble sacrifice for a noble cause, leather was simply not as good a hinge as metal, and over time the weight of the shutters would start stretching the hinges, causing the shutters to sag outward at the top...thus the sagging shutters in Liberty Square.

Disney's "leather" hinges are made of metal - in the shape and texture of stretched leather hinges - to preserve the historically-accurate look of the area.  This fact leads us to another:

5. If You Can Touch It, It's Real...If You Can't, It's Not

Disney is the master of illusion.  And the best way to illustrate that is to look at all the architecture.  Disney has a philosophy that says, "If you can touch it, make it real...but if you can't touch it, make it to last."

There are certainly some exceptions to this rule as far as things that can be touched (with the amount of people rubbing up against and handling certain items, some things are simply not able to be real).  But for the most part, Disney tries to keep things real at touch level.

As for those thatched roofs you swear are of natural materials, or the cobwebs in the Haunted Mansion, or anything else outside the reach of hands, they are 99% manufactured substitutes - fiberglass and metal, concrete and styrophone - creatively tailored to look absolutely real.

6. Murky Water and Deep Rivers

Many people look at the waters of the Jungle Cruise, the Pirates of the Caribbean or Liberty Square Riverboats and think that the waters are much deeper than they really are.

At the start of Disney's complex system of waterways (which flow throughout all the Disney parks), Imagineers thought to add a bio-degradable dye to the water to make it darker, causing the waters to appear murkier and thus deeper than they really are.  At the end of the system is a process which removes the dye, causing the waters to once again show their normal color.

7. The Huge Fireworks Display

This was an accidental discovery and one that more people probably know but don't think about.

One night, we got stuck behind the Castle when the "Wishes" fireworks display started.  It was a neat display, but came nowhere close to the grandeur and majesty of seeing the fireworks from our traditional spot in front of the Castle and back a ways.  The fireworks were okay, but many of them seemed puny...standard bursts of fireworks you might find in your hometown 4th of July celebration.

What makes Disney's fireworks display in the Magic Kingdom so special is the Imagineers' trick of using the forced perspective of the Castle.  When you look at the Castle at night, you lose sight of how tall (really how short) it really is...it looks absolutely HUGE!  So when you set fireworks to burst behind the castle - set against the palette of smoke from earlier fireworks - they too look huge.  It's all illusion, done amazingly.

8. The One Snack You Can't Buy

There's so many great treats in the Magic Kingdom that very few people notice...there's no gum for sale.

This is a practical matter for Disney.  If you've been to other theme parks, you see gum everywhere, especially on the ground and on walls of rides.  And in recent years, frankly, Disney has slipped a little themselves and you'll find pieces stuck here and there.  But Disney helps lessen the sticky clean-up issue by simply not allowing gum to be sold.

9. What Else is Beneath Our Feet...Besides the Utilidors?

A lot of people don't realize that there's an entire complex of passageways and rooms beneath the entire Magic Kingdom.

Guests actually spend their time on the 2nd floor of the Magic Kingdom, with Utilidors (Disney's words) underneath so that Characters and Cast Members can get in and out of the park without being seen (and thus destroying the illusion).  But even if do know about the Utilidors, most people don't realize what else is down below:

The Magic Kingdom has one of the largest vacuum trash set-up in the world.  It's part of an amazing recycling system that sucks all the trash from around the park into a center gathering area, where the trash - as well as 1000s of lost items - find their way.  There, the trash is sorted and recycled, lost items if salvageable are taken to Lost and Found, and the rest is removed.

Disney's recycling program is extensive, reclaiming the vast majority of the trash thrown into their bins.

10. The Lines on the Roads Backstage

Disney is amazingly protective in making sure Guests only see the "magic."

On one of the backstage tours, we asked about lines of various colors drawn on the roadways.  It was explained that these lines represented places in the roadway where Characters walking and on Parade floats could be seen by someone, somewhere in the park.

Disney has done extensive hiding of parking areas, back lot features, etc., so that when you're high up on Splash Mountain you're not looking at some Cast Member driving around in a pick-up truck.  The rule of the park is, "If you can be seen by even one Guest, you must remain true to your Character."  We had the opportunity to test this at Walt Disney World's Epcot Center, when the Tapestry of Dreams Parade was still being run.  At the end of the parade, Cast Members would exit through a gated area and walk down a 100 to 150-yard passageway before disappearing to the left.  Even though it was dark and though they could barely be seen, each dancer and Cast Member continued as if they were in front of thousands of people, staying in character until they became out of sight.

There's more Unknown Facts, but I'd really encourage you to take one of Disney's behind-the-scenes tours to get the full stories.  But if you found an item or two that you didn't know about the Magic Kingdom in this article, I'd sure appreciate you taking a second to click "YES" under "Was this Guide Helpful?"  THANK YOU!!!


Guide ID: 10000000001201769Guide created: 06/15/06 (updated 07/23/08)

 
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