![]() On the left side of the building there was an arts and crafts room. You would place your body or a funny pose on the green walls and every 30 seconds or so, there would be a big flash in the room and your body image would appear on the wall as a shadow as you stepped away to look. The back left corner of the building had a square room anyone could walk into. This effect was similar to the reflective mirror of Madame Leota in Memento Mori at Magic Kingdom. In the middle/back of the building was a reflective mirror you could look into and every few minutes a face would appear (can’t recall what the face was). A Cast Member would sit at the top and you had to tell them what character you were and this was their way of telling the CM below you were ready to come down. At the top was a slide that would take you all the way to the bottom. Tons of tunnels and platforms to crawl through. No coins or anything needed.Ībove the arcade was a huge jungle gym about two stories high. All the games would start with the press of a button. Here they had Mighty Ducks air hockey, Flubber skee-ball, and a Winnie the Pooh game where ping pong balls looking like bees would fly with a burst of air and you had to catch them in a plastic net you controlled. Moving beyond that to the right side/back corner of the building was the arcade. ![]() Material of everything was similar to what you would see in a play area at a mall. Upon entering the entire floor (counterclockwise), to the right was a Hundred Acre Wood children’s play area. Once you entered the building before you went through the turnstiles with your wristband, you had to remove your shoes and place them in a wall of cubbies. C.Diz could probably fill in more and fact check me but I’ll try. "On a recent afternoon, the "Tarzan" activity center from Disney's current animated feature was the most popular place in the club, with children lined up to swing on a "vine" like Tarzan and play the jungle drums." This was in the flex space I mentioned above.Ĭlick to expand.Im going to say all of this based off of visual memory. The green square with the nature print on it may be the winnie the pooh area or tarzan area. "This way no one can hit their head on the instruments, and there is nothing that can get too hot," she says." On an upper level is a low-ceiling area meant for kids to climb around, so for safety Dinkel built fiber-optic lighting from Fiberstars into the scenic elements. Strings of lightbulbs covered with Lumisphere plastic globes in pink, purple, yellow, and blue create the illusion of a bigtop. "A circus area, intended for kids from four to six years old, has a mini-carousel accented with low-voltage rim lights. The photo above is taken from the Jungle Climber, over looking the Applaudville Theater.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |