The Ingenuity That Went Into The Design Of Disney World #2
One of the problems that plague society today is the loss of electrical power. Our electrical power infrastructure has several vulnerabilities. We live in the country and storms passing through would often bring down a power line and then no electricity for hours or days. I read an interesting article that described how Disney World is designed to keep the power on.
You’ve planned a trip to Walt Disney World envisioning sunny Orlando. Even though many, many things will be different right now, one thing you’re probably not expecting is for the power to go out while you’re waiting in line to ride Space Mountain. But as a storm last summer demonstrated, inclement weather can throw off even a Magic Kingdom.
Despite causing many residents of northeastern states to lose power, Hurricane Isaias, which hit in early August 2020, actually didn’t cause a power outage at Disney World. The storm only grazed Florida’s east coast. But last summer, Disney World did experience a rare power outage at the end of August. Likely as a result of Tropical Storm Dorian, much of the shopping district of Disney Springs plunged into darkness. Some emergency lights came on, but the district as a whole was eerily dark. Some Disney Resorts also lost power, and many Magic Kingdom rides stopped running. The outage only lasted about an hour and a half, though.
In general, power outages at Disney are rare. Why? Essentially because Disney is built more like a city center than a neighborhood. Its infrastructure is industrial. That means no fragile power lines hanging in places where one falling tree can take out power for an entire block.
“Disney World is built with multiple system redundancies to handle the strain of tens of millions of visitors a year in the lightning capital of the world [central Florida],” says Robert Niles, the editor of ThemeParkInsider.com. In addition, Disney generates an enormous amount of power with its own solar facilities and has backup sources on site.
That said, Niles adds that if a hurricane or another powerful storm hits — and a lightning strike hits the right transformer — Disney can and does lose power. But with its support crews, Disney can generally get things repaired quickly.
Source: Why Disney World rarely ever has a power outage
When our family visited Disney World last year (pre-coronavirus), there were many activities other than just rides and attractions that our grandchildren participated in. One of these was pin trading. It was simple to do. Just buy a pin at one of the shops and then begin up-trading pins. At the time almost every shop had a collection of pins on a board to trade with and cast members also had pins. So it was a fun thing that the grandchildren found interesting.
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