Walt Disney World Stories and Facts You Shouldn’t Miss

Have you ever visited Walt Disney World? It’s been almost 45 years since Disney World opened and turned Orlando into one of the world’s most visited destinations. Since my parents lived in Melbourne, Florida, my family and I have a history of visiting this resort many times over the years. Sure, the long lines are a punch line. And all Disney magic comes with a price tag. But Walt Disney World is the most amazing resort we have ever visited or even read about. And Walt Disney World stories and interesting facts make for a very fantastic read. Check them out and tell us what you think.

Resort Overview

In 1959, Walt Disney World Productions began looking for land for a second park to supplement their first park Disneyland, which opened in Anaheim, California, in 1955. Market surveys revealed that only 5% of Disneyland’s visitors came from east of the Mississippi River, where 75% of the population of the United States lived.

To avoid a burst of land speculation, Disney used various dummy corporations to acquire 27,443 acres of land.

Today in 2014, Walt Disney World Resort is a contiguous nearly 39-square-mile, world-class entertainment and recreation center featuring four theme parks (Magic Kingdom, Epcot, Disney’s Hollywood Studios, and Disney’s Animal Kingdom); two water adventure parks (Blizzard Beach and Typhoon Lagoon); 34 resort hotels (24 owned and operated by Walt Disney World, includes seven Disney Vacation Club resort properties); 81 holes of golf on five courses; two full-service spas; Disney’s Wedding Pavilion; ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex; and Downtown Disney, an entertainment-shopping-dining complex.

Park summary

MAGIC KINGDOM

Opened Oct. 1, 1971, the first theme park at Walt Disney World Resort sits on 142 acres with the 189-foot-tall Cinderella Castle at its center. Similar to Disneyland in California, Magic Kingdom is divided into seven themed lands — Main Street, U.S.A.; Adventureland; Frontierland; Liberty Square; Fantasyland; Mickey’s Toontown Fair; and Tomorrowland.

EPCOT

An ever-changing international and discovery showplace covering 305 acres. Opened Oct. 1, 1982.

Future World – Theme areas focusing on discovery and scientific achievements.

World Showcase – Eleven nations surrounding World Showcase Lagoon.

DISNEY’S HOLLYWOOD STUDIOS

A working film, TV, and radio studio, as well as a theme park on 135 acres. Production facilities opened summer of 1988. Entertainment facilities opened in May 1989. The first film made at Disney’s Hollywood Studios was “Ernest Saves Christmas.” No movies or TV shows are filmed there today.

DISNEY’S ANIMAL KINGDOM

High adventures with real exotic animals, close encounters with prehistoric giants, and warm, fuzzy moments with beloved Disney characters. The Oasis entry garden welcomes guests into Disney’s fourth major theme park, which sprawls across 403 acres. Jungles, forests, and a vast savanna are divided into five themed lands: Africa, Camp Minnie-Mickey, DinoLand U.S.A., Discovery Island, and Asia.

Related: The Secrets to What Makes Brevard Zoo So Successful

ESPN WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS COMPLEX

A 220-acre complex designed to accommodate professional-caliber training and competition, festival and tournament events, and vacation-fitness activities in more than 30 individual and team sports. The complex includes a 7,500-seat baseball stadium and a 5,500-seat fieldhouse. Annual events include Atlanta Braves spring training. First event: March 28, 1997.

It’s not a small world

Walt Disney bought the 43 square miles of Central Florida swampland for Disney World for $5 million, or about $185 an acre.

Covering 40 square miles, Walt Disney World Resort is about the size of San Francisco or two Manhattan islands.  Of the more than 25,000 acres, less than 35 percent has been developed with a quarter designated as a wilderness preserve.

Interesting landmark facts

Cinderella’s Castle is made out of fiberglass, and it stands 189 feet tall.

Inside the upper levels of Cinderella’s Castle is an apartment that Walt Disney intended to use when he and his family were in Florida. It was left unfinished when he died until Disney announced in 2006 that it would be turned into a deluxe suite, which is awarded randomly to a family every day. It comes complete with 24-karat gold tile floors and a “magic mirror” that turns into a television.

Spaceship Earth, the visual and thematic centerpiece of Epcot, weighs 16 million pounds – more than three times that of a space shuttle fully fueled and ready for launch. The outer “skin” of Spaceship Earth is made up of 11,324 aluminum and plastic-alloy triangles. Also, did you know that rainwater never falls off the sphere?  It’s channeled into the ball and funneled away.

In numbers of dollars, it cost as much to build Big Thunder Mountain in 1979 as it did to build all of Disneyland in 1955! (Of course “one dollar” bought more in 1955 than “one dollar” did in 1979.)

The World Showcase lagoon is 185 acres in size and is larger than Disneyland in California!

The walkway around the World Showcase is 1-1/2 Miles.

1,800 tons of steel were used in the mountain structure of Expedition Everest at Animal Kingdom. That is about six times the amount of steel used in a traditional office building of this size.

Related: 10 Smashing Reasons the Space Coast Is the Best Florida Vacation

Record holders

Magic Kingdom’s opening day attendance was 10,000. That was the number of people in attendance for Disney World’s soft opening (Magic Kingdom was the first and only park on opening day Oct. 1, 1971). Today, the Magic Kingdom alone averages about 47,000 visitors a day.

The Wishes fireworks display at Magic Kingdom costs about $33,000. to put on. Disney is the largest “consumer” of fireworks in the world.

More than 75 million Cokes are consumed each year at Walt Disney World Resort along with 13 million bottles of water.  Guests also gobble 10 million hamburgers, 6 million hot dogs, 9 million pounds of French fries, and more than 300,000 pounds of popcorn.

Stormalong Bay, Disney’s Beach Club Resort swimming area, holds 750,000 gallons of water, making it the largest sand-bottom pool in the world.

If you wanted to stay in all the guestrooms in all of the hotels and resorts currently open on Walt Disney World property (at a rate of one per night), it would take more than 68 years.

Walt Disney World Lost and Found is one busy place. Every day an average of 210 pairs of sunglasses is turned in and, since 1971, an estimated 1.65 million pairs of glasses have found their way into the “lost” bin. On an annual basis, Lost and Found cast members collect more than 6,000 cell phones, 3,500 digital cameras, 18,000 hats, and 7,500 autograph books. Wondering about the weirdest things ever found? How about a glass eye, a prosthetic leg, and a potty trainer — all of which were claimed?

When Disney World opened, adult admission to the Magic Kingdom cost $3.50. Today it costs $100.