Disneyland’s Galaxy’s Edge set to open

The theme park, spread out over 14 acres, offers Star Wars-like interstellar ride

May 27, 2019 09:38 pm | Updated May 28, 2019 08:21 am IST

A rendering by Disney and Lucasfilm shows people on the planned ‘Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance’ attraction.

A rendering by Disney and Lucasfilm shows people on the planned ‘Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance’ attraction.

Disneyland’s new Galaxy’s Edge attraction promises to transport visitors to a new locale in the Star Wars universe, but anyone who overstay their visit might not catch their ride on the Millennium Falcon, where guests can roam the ship’s halls and engage in a dogfight with TIE Fighters.

The theme park is expecting massive crowds when Galaxy’s Edge opens on May 31, and has detailed plans on how to accommodate guests or help them “move along” with the aid of Stormtroopers.

For the first three weeks, guests must have a reservation to enter and will be limited to four hours inside the immersive new land, the largest single-theme land inside a Disney park. It is spread out over 14 acres of rides and experiences, including shops selling personal droids, lightsabers, and Star Wars-appropriate food and drink.

Stormtroopers to the aid

A special wristband will identify a visitor’s time window, and once it expires, Disney said it will shut off access to key attractions and merchandise locations. Park employees dressed as Star Wars characters will ultimately ask visitors to make their way toward one of the three exits so a new group can enter.

Visitors seated inside the planned ‘Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run’ attraction.

Visitors seated inside the planned ‘Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run’ attraction.

 

“There might be some First Order officers out there helping us or maybe some Stormtroopers asking people to move along,” said Kris Theiler, vice president of Disneyland park. “We’ll employ the First Order maybe later in the reservation period if we need to.”

It’s just one example of the lengths to which Disney has gone to make Galaxy’s Edge look and feel like part of the Star Wars universe. It’s designed as a grungy outpost on a distant planet.

The marquee attraction is a massive replica of the Millennium Falcon.

The park has plenty of other, more subtle ways to manage crowd flow. Ms. Theiler said walkways were widened from 3 to about 6 feet in different areas, and stroller parking is available. Around 7,500 new parking spaces along with new parking lot entrances and toll booths were added. A new pedestrian bridge was also built to help avoid logjams.

This rendering shows the planned Black Spire Outpost, a village on the planet of Batuu that will be part of expansion project called Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge.

This rendering shows the planned Black Spire Outpost, a village on the planet of Batuu that will be part of expansion project called Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge.

 

Disneyland declined to share the capacity limit for Galaxy’s Edge. The park will implement a virtual queue system after June 23, when the pre-reservation requirement and four-hour time limit are set to expire.

Virtual queue

The virtual queue will be offered inside Disneyland only for visitors to reserve a spot to enter the Star Wars attraction, and is intended to alleviate long lines. Updates will be available through the Disneyland app or a kiosk in the park. “We believe that we can get a lot of folks through the land, and the wait won’t be unmanageable,” Ms. Theiler said.

Ms. Theiler said Disneyland has learned from its other attractions, such as It’s a Small World, Dumbo and Matterhorn Bobsled, how to manage crowds.

“Many of these attractions were built in the ‘50s,” she said. “We didn’t have the volume back then that we do today. We’ve gotten into the practice of utilising walkway space. We’ve been doing a lot of infrastructure work the last couple years.”

Even before Galaxy’s Edge opens, Disneyland was the second most popular theme park in the world last year with 18.6 million visitors. It is second only to Disney World in Florida, where a version of Galaxy’s Edge is scheduled to open Aug. 29.

Ms. Theiler said Disneyland also wants to create a fun and safe environment for visitors who might want to partake in a lightsaber battle or let their personal droid roam., she said.

“If everyone’s having fun and no safety issues, we’re going to let people do that,” she said. “But if we start feeling like that’s interfering with other guest experiences or other safety issues, then we’ll have a gentle conversation with that group.”

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