- Spaceship Earth
- Innoventions
- Mission: Space
- Test Track
- The Seas with Nemo & Friends (Turtle Talk with Crush)
- The Land (Soarin' Around the World, Living with the Land)
- Imagination! (Journey into Imagination with Figment)
- Wonders of Life/Festival Center (Seasonal operation)
- Test Track opened in the former World of Motion pavilion and is currently sponsored by Chevrolet.
- Living with the Land is currently sponsored by Chiquita.
- Individual small attractions and exhibits within or nearby the Innoventions pavilions are sponsored by various companies such as Club Cool presented by Coca-Cola.
- Colortopia is currently sponsored by Glidden.
- Mexico
- Norway
- China
- Germany
- Italy
- United States
- Japan
- Morocco
- France
- United Kingdom
- Canada
- The Epcot International Flower and Garden Festival, inaugurated in 1994, uses specially-themed floral displays throughout the park, including topiary sculptures of Disney characters. Guests can meet gardening experts and learn new ideas they can use in their own home gardens. The 18th annual event was scheduled for March 2 – May 15. Each event takes more than a full year to plan and more than 20,000 cast member hours.
- The Epcot International Food & Wine Festival, inaugurated in 1995, draws amateur and professional gourmets to sample delicacies from all around the world, including nations that do not have a permanent presence in World Showcase. Celebrity chefs are often on-hand to host the events. In 2008, the festival featured the Bocuse d'Or USA, the American semifinal of the biennial Bocuse d'Or cooking competition.
- The Epcot International Festival of the Arts inaugurated in 2017, is a festival showcasing visual, culinary, and performing arts. The first annual event took place on weekends from January 13 through February 20, 2017.
- Holidays Around the World is Epcot's annual holiday celebration. The World Showcase pavilions feature storytellers describing their nation's holiday traditions, and three nightly performances of the "Candlelight Processional" featuring an auditioned mass choir and a celebrity guest narrating the story of Christmas. During "Holidays Around the World", Illuminations: Reflections of Earth features a special extended ending.
- On New Year's Eve, the park offers a variety of additional entertainment including live DJ dance areas throughout the park and a special New Year's Eve countdown edition of IllumiNations: Reflections of Earth.
Epcot (originally named EPCOT Center) is a theme park at
the Walt Disney
World Resort in Bay Lake, Florida.
It is owned and operated by the Walt Disney
Company through its Parks and
Resorts division. Inspired by an unrealized concept developed
by Walt Disney,
the park opened on October 1, 1982 and was the second of four theme parks built at
Walt Disney World, after the Magic Kingdom. Spanning
300 acres (120 ha), more than twice the size of the Magic Kingdom
park, Epcot is dedicated to the celebration of human achievement, namely
technological innovation and
international culture,
and is often referred to as a "permanent world's fair". The
park is divided into two sections: Future World, made up of eight pavilions,
and World Showcase, themed to 11 world nations.
In
2015, the park hosted about 11.98 million guests, ranking it the
third-most-visited theme park in North America and the sixth-most-visited
theme park in the world.The park is represented by Spaceship Earth,
a geodesic sphere that
also serves as an attraction. Epcot was known as EPCOT Center until 1994 when
it was renamed Epcot '94, then Epcot '95, now commonly known simply as Epcot.
Dedication
The
theme park opened on October 1, 1982. The dedication plaque near the
entrance states:
To all
who come to this place of joy, hope and friendship, welcome.
Epcot
Center is inspired by Walt Disney's creative genius. Here, human achievements
are celebrated through imagination, the wonders of enterprise, and concepts of
a future that promises new and exciting benefits for all.
May
Epcot Center entertain, inform and inspire. And, above all, may it instill a
new sense of belief and pride in man's ability to shape a world that offers
hope to people everywhere.
History
The
park's name, EPCOT, is an acronym for Experimental Prototype
Community of Tomorrow, a utopian city of the
future planned by Walt
Disney, often interchanging "city" and "community." 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
new systems. And EPCOT will always be a showcase to the world of the ingenuity
and imagination of American free enterprise." His original vision
was for a model community which would have been home to twenty thousand
residents and a test bed for city planning as
well as organization. It was to have been built in the shape of a circle with
businesses and commercial areas at its center with community buildings,
schools, and recreational complexes around it while residential neighborhoods
would line the perimeter. This radial plan concept is strongly influenced by
British planner Ebenezer
Howard and his Garden Cities
of To-morrow. Transportation would have been provided by monorails and PeopleMovers (like
that in Magic Kingdom's Tomorrowland).
Automobile traffic would be kept underground, leaving pedestrians safe above
ground. The original model 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 remaining portion of the model is visible on the left (when
facing forward) behind glass. Walt Disney was not able to obtain funding and
permission to start work on his Florida property until he agreed to first
build Magic Kingdom. He died nearly five years before Magic Kingdom opened.
After
Disney's death, Walt Disney
Productions decided that it did not want to be in the business of
running a city without Walt's guidance. 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 (now Lake Buena
Vista), a legislative mechanism allowing Disney 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,
Disney 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 further cemented this control by deannexing Celebration from the RCID.
The
original plans for the park showed indecision over the park's purpose.
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 a World's Fair international
theme, and the two were combined. The park was originally named EPCOT Center
to reflect the ideals and values of the city. It was constructed for an
estimated $800 million to $1.4 billion and took three years to
build, at the time the largest construction project on Earth. The parking
lot serving the park is 141 acres (57 ha) (including bus area) and can
accommodate 11,211 vehicles (grass areas hold additional 500+ vehicles).
Before it opened on October 1, 1982, Walt Disney World Ambassador Genie Field
introduced E.
Cardon Walker, Disney's chairman and CEO, who dedicated EPCOT Center.
Walker also presented a family with lifetime passes for the two Walt Disney
World theme parks. His remarks were followed by Florida Governor Bob Graham and
William Ellinghaus, president of AT&T.
As
part of the opening-day ceremony, dancers and band members
performed We've Just Begun to Dream. The Sherman Brothers wrote
a song especially for the occasion entitled "The World
Showcase March". During the finale, doves and many sets of balloons
were released. Performing groups representing countries from all over the
world performed in World Showcase. Water was gathered from major rivers across
the globe and emptied into the park's fountain of nations ceremonial
containers to mark the opening. Located at the front of the park is a plaque
bearing Walker's opening-day dedication.
In
November 2016, it was announced at the Destination D fan event that Epcot
would be receiving “a major transformation” that would help transition the
park into being “more Disney, timeless, relevant, family-friendly” while
keeping the original vision alive. No further details were mentioned. In
July 2017, The Walt Disney Company announced that Epcot would undergo a
multi-year, redesign and expansion plan that would introduce Guardians
of the Galaxy and Ratatouille attractions
to Future World and World Showcase, as well as maintaining the original vision
and spririt for the park.
Areas
Epcot
is divided into two main themed areas: Future World and World Showcase. The
World Showcase usually opens two hours after park opening and remains open
later than the Future World section of the park. Most major attractions in
Future World remain open until the park's closing time. A secondary park gate
is located between the France and United Kingdom pavilions of World Showcase
and is known as the International Gateway. The International Gateway is
directly accessible to guests arriving from the nearby Epcot Area Resorts and Disney's
Hollywood Studios.
Future World
Future
World consists of a variety of pavilions that explore innovative aspects and
applications including technology and science, with each pavilion featuring
self-contained attractions. Future World also serves as the park's main
entrance and features the park's iconic landmark, Spaceship Earth,
a large geodesic
sphere structure which houses a themed attraction inside. Originally,
each pavilion of Future World featured a unique circular logo which was
featured on park signage and the attractions themselves. The logos, including
that of Epcot itself, have been phased out over recent years, but some
remnants are still scattered throughout the park; the pavilions are now
instead identified by name and recognized by the main attraction(s) housed
inside. The various pavilions and attractions located in Future World include
the following:
Corporate sponsorships
Each
pavilion was initially sponsored by
a corporation which helped fund its construction and maintenance in return for
the corporation's logos and some marketing elements appearing throughout the
pavilion. For example, Universe of Energy was
sponsored by Exxon from
1982 to 2004, and The Land was
sponsored by Kraft from
1982 to 1993, then Nestlé from
1993 to 2009. Each pavilion contains a private "VIP area" for its
sponsor with offices, lounges, and reception areas hidden away from regular
park guests. While some pavilions still retain active sponsorships, in recent
years several pavilions have lost sponsorships due to lack of interest from
partner companies in renewing expiring agreements. After General Electric left Horizons in
1993, it closed for a couple of years, then reopened temporarily while
neighboring attractions Universe of Energy and World of Motion were
renovated. Horizons closed permanently on January 9, 1999, and was demolished
in 2000 to make room for the opening of Mission: SPACE on October 9, 2003.
Metlife sponsored Wonders
of Life from 1989 to 2001, until that area was closed. However, the
Wonders of Life pavilion is still mostly intact and is used for both the Flower
and Garden Festival and the Food
and Wine Festival. Current active sponsorships include the following:
World Showcase
World Showcase is a large area
reminiscent of a permanent world's fair containing
11 pavilions, each themed and dedicated to represent a specific country. The
pavilions surround the World Showcase Lagoon, a large manmade lake located in
the center of World Showcase with a perimeter of 1.2 miles (1.9 km). In
clockwise order, the 11 pavilions are:
Of the
11 pavilions, only Morocco and Norway were
not present at the park's opening, as they were added in 1984 and 1988,
respectively.Each pavilion contains themed architecture, landscapes,
streetscapes, attractions, shops and restaurants representing the respective
country's culture and cuisine. In an effort to maintain the authenticity of
the represented countries, the pavilions are primarily staffed by citizens of
the respective countries as part of the Cultural
Representative Program through Q1 visa agreements. Some
pavilions also contain themed rides,
shows, and live entertainment representative of the respective
country. The only pavilion that is directly sponsored by the government of its
respective country is Morocco; the remaining pavilions are primarily sponsored
by private companies with affiliations to the represented countries.
Originally,
the showcase was to include partnerships with the governments of the different
countries. According to Disney's 1975 Annual Report, the Showcase would:
...offer
participating countries a permanent installation for such features as themed
restaurants and shops, product exhibits, industrial displays, cultural
presentations, a trade center, and even special facilities for business
meetings.
Major
sponsorships for each participating nation will be asked to provide the
capital to cover the cost of designing, developing and constructing its
attraction and/or ride and all exhibits, as well as the Pavilion itself. It
will also have the responsibility for funding the housing for its employees in
the International Village. Its land lease will cover the cost of maintaining
the attraction for a minimum of ten years.
The
Disney organization will be responsible for area development, including the
construction of transportation systems and utilities. We will also build and
operate the internal people moving system, the Courtyard of Nations and
central theater facility.
Proposed pavilions and unused locations[edit]
Pavilions
for Puerto Rico, Russia, Switzerland, Costa Rica, Spain, Venezuela,
United Arab Emirates, and Israel have occasionally been rumored as potential
future pavilions but have never made it past the planning phases to date. The
Israeli, Spanish, and an Equatorial Africa pavilion (blending elements of the
cultures of countries such as Kenya and Zaire) were even announced as coming
soon in 1982, but never took off. Instead, a small African themed refreshment
shop known as the Outpost currently resides where Equatorial Africa was to
be.Israel, five African countries (Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Namibia, and
South Africa), as well as eight other countries (Brazil, Chile, India,
Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Scotland, and Sweden), took part in the Millennium Village during
the Millennium
Celebration.
There
are currently nine undeveloped spots for countries around the World
Showcase—including the space occupied by the Outpost—in between the locations
of the current countries. Two of the potential locations, on either side of
the United Kingdom, are currently occupied by World ShowPlace.
Two more lie on either side of the American Adventure, though this pavilion's
use of reversed forced
perspective may preclude the construction of additional buildings as
they would ruin the illusion.
Alcohol policy
Unlike
Magic Kingdom, which up until 2012 did not serve alcohol and now only serves
it in a few table service locations,most stores and restaurants at Epcot,
especially in the World Showcase, serve and/or sell a variety of alcoholic
beverages including specialty drinks, craft beers, wines, and spirits
reflective of the respective countries. The park also hosts the Epcot
International Food & Wine Festival, an annual event featuring food and
drink samplings from all over the world, along with live entertainment and
special exhibits.
The World Showcase Adventure
Originally
based on the Disney
Channel animated series Kim Possible, the World
Showcase Adventure is an interactive mobile attraction taking place in several
pavilions throughout the World Showcase. The attraction is an electronic scavenger hunt that
has guests using special "Kimmunicators" (in actuality, customized
cell phones) to help teenage crime-fighters Kim Possible and Ron Stoppable
solve a "crime" or disrupt an evil-doer's "plans for global
domination." The "Kimmunicator" is able to trigger specific
events within the pavilion grounds that provide clues to completing the
adventure. Launched in January 2009 and presented by Verizon Wireless,
the Adventure is included in park admission. It was succeeded by Agent P's World
Showcase Adventure, based on Disney's Phineas and Ferb, on
June 23, 2012.
IllumiNations: Reflections of Earth
Illuminations:
Reflections of Earth is an award-winning show taking place in the World
Showcase Lagoon every night at the park's closing time (usually
9:00 pm). It features fireworks, lasers, fire, and water fountains timed
to a musical score over the World Showcase Lagoon. A large rotating globe with
curved LED screens is the centerpiece of the show and is used to display
images of people and places. The current version 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 nineteen large torches signifying the first 19
centuries of the common era, and the show culminates in the globe opening like
a lotus blossom to reveal a twentieth torch, representing the now-completed
20th century.
Annual events
Epcot
hosts a number of special events during the year: