Disneyland Park (Paris)

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Disney theme park
Disneyland Park (Paris) logo


Le Château de la Belle au Bois Dormant
(Sleeping Beauty Castle)

Disneyland Park
Location Marne-la-Vallée, France
Opening Day April 12, 1992
Resort Disneyland Resort Paris
Theme Various
Website Disneyland Resort Paris homepage
Operator Euro Disney SCA
Disneyland Resort Paris

Disneyland Park
Walt Disney Studios Park
Disney Village

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Disneyland Hotel
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Euro Disney S.C.A.

Disneyland Park is a theme park which is a part of Disneyland Resort Paris. Owned by Euro Disney S.C.A., it is one of two theme parks in the complex just outside of Paris, in Marne-la-Vallée, France.

The park is based on a formula pioneered by Disneyland in California and further employed at the Magic Kingdom in Florida and Tokyo Disneyland in Japan. Occupying 566,560 (140 acres), it is the largest Disney park based on the original in California. The park opened as Euro Disneyland on 12 April 1992.

Contents

To all who come to this happy place, welcome. Once upon a time... a master storyteller, Walt Disney, inspired by Europe's best loved tales, used his own special gifts to share them with the world. He envisioned a Magic Kingdom where these stories would come to life, and called it Disneyland.

Now his dream returns to the land that inspired it. Euro Disneyland is dedicated to the young and the young at heart... with the hope that it will be a source of joy and inspiration for all the world.

Concept art of Sleeping Beauty Castle, by Walt Disney Imagineering.
Concept art of Sleeping Beauty Castle, by Walt Disney Imagineering.

For the fourth park to be based on the original in Anaheim, California, modifications were made to the concepts and designs of the park. Amongst these changes was a shift from Tomorrowland to "Discoveryland", giving the area a retrofuturistic theme rather than futuristic. Other elements that were altered include the Haunted Mansion, which was redesigned as Phantom Manor, and Space Mountain. The park's location in Europe brought forth its own challenges. For instance, the castle is said by its designers to have been necessarily reevaluated for a continent on which authentic castles stand.[1]

Modifications to the park were made to protect against changes in weather in the Parisian climate. Covered walkways were added and Michael Eisner ordered the installation of 35 fireplaces in hotels and restaurants. “People walk around Disney World (sic) with humidity and temperatures in the 90s, and they walk into an air-conditioned ride and say, ‘This is the greatest,’ ” said Eisner. “When it’s raining and miserable, I hope they will walk into one of those lobbies with the fireplace going and say the same thing.”[2]

The park, as well as its surrounding complex, initially failed to meet financial expectations. This resulted in an image change in which the word "Euro" was phased out of several names, including Euro Disneyland.

In 2007, the park map lists 48 attractions in five areas known as "lands."

The Disneyland Railroad runs along the perimeter of the park and stops in Main Street, U.S.A., Frontierland, Fantasyland and Discoveryland.

Main article: Main Street, U.S.A.
  • Horse-Drawn Streetcars
  • Main Street Vehicles
  • Liberty Arcade
  • Discovery Arcade
  • Dapper Dan's Hair Cuts
  • City Hall
  • Disneyland Railroad Main Street Train Station

Fort Comstock at Frontierland
Fort Comstock at Frontierland
Adventureland
Adventureland
Captain Hook's galley at Adventureland
Captain Hook's galley at Adventureland
Main article: Frontierland

Main article: Adventureland

Main article: Fantasyland

Main article: Discoveryland

  • Shareholders of Euro Disney S.C.A. have access to a private lounge at the park, Salon Mickey, which allows them to bypass the regular turnstiles.
  • The Simpsons parodies the initial response to Euro Disneyland in the episode Itchy & Scratchy Land.
  • In the movie Escape From L.A., Snake Plissken and Map-to-the-Stars Eddie are hangliding over what looks like Disneyland in the postapocalyptic Los Angeles. Plissken remarks "Is that what I think it is?" and Eddie replies: "Yeah... Place changed owners so many times then went out of business. That place in Paris killed them!"
  • On an episode of the Warner Bros. cartoon Freakazoid, the title character goes back in time to 1941 and stops the Japanese from attacking Pearl Harbor. When he returns to the present he finds out the world is a better place and reads in the newspaper that people are actually going to Euro Disney.
  • Warner Bros. later spoofed the park again in the Histeria! episode "Music", which featured a sketch where Nostradamus hosted a Dating Game parody, with the prize being "a trip to Euro Dizzyland", which is naturally deserted; when the bacherlorette, Miss Information, picks him, Nostradamus admits he doesn't want to go there.

  1. ^ Imagineers (1998). Walt Disney Imagineering: A Behind the Dreams Look At Making the Magic Real. Disney Editions. ISBN 0786883723.
  2. ^ http://209.85.135.104/search?q=cache:_OZmL6CkLn0J:www.thunderbird.edu/wwwfiles/pdf/about_thunderbird/case_series/a15990007.pdf

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Coordinates: 48.873° N 2.777° E

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