Home » 5 Things You Never Knew About Walt Disney World’s Secret On-Property Neighborhoods

    5 Things You Never Knew About Walt Disney World’s Secret On-Property Neighborhoods

    Image - Gmaletic, Wikimedia Commons

    Tucked away in nearly hidden corners of the sprawling Walt Disney World resort are two of the unlikeliest spots you could imagine: two fully incorporated cities, not shown on any publicly distributed property map, hidden in plain sight. Has a company town been this mysterious since the days of the atom bomb production in Oak Ridge, TN? What are these cities, why do they exist, and who lives there? We’ll dig through Disney history to provide some little known facts about these most interesting of communities.

    1. Where they are

    Image - Gmaletic, Wikimedia Commons

    The cities are known as Bay Lake and Lake Buena Vista. If you are familiar with these terms, it is probably because they are used to refer to much more heralded parts of the Walt Disney World resort. Bay Lake is the big natural lake around which the Magic Kingdom, Contemporary Resort, Wilderness Lodge, and Fort Wilderness sit. Lake Buena Vista is the official mailing address city for Walt Disney World, and is also part of the old name for what is now the Downtown Disney Marketplace.

    To understand the purpose of the two cities, it is necessary to understand what Central Florida was in the 1960s, when Walt Disney decided to build the Florida project there. The majority of Walt’s 25,000 acre purchase was swampland and wetlands deemed uninhabitable by locals. The nearest power lines were 15 miles away and the counties that shared a border inside the property could not possibly meet the site’s water needs. Taxpayers did not want to shoulder the sizeable expenses involved in developing the property.

    Disney worked with politicians in the state capital of Tallahassee to develop a highly unusual and innovative solution. By creating a special taxing district known as the Reedy Creek Improvement District (RCID), Disney alone would take on the responsibility of development costs. RCID would also serve as a sort of county government district, handling its own building codes, fire rescue, zoning issues, utilities, emergency medical services, and so forth.

    There was just one problem. Unwilling to give the corporation complete autonomy, state lawmakers insisted that RCID could not take on certain duties such as police protection that are typically handled at the city or town level. So an agreement was reached for Disney to found two cities whose residents would be empowered to make certain decisions.

    Remember, at this point the Florida project was still expected to include a strong residential component, with thousands of people living and working inside the futuristic city of Epcot. So at that point, stocking the new project with a few startup residents was hardly an outlandish concept. Thus, the cities of Bay Lake and Lake Buena Vista were born, alongside the Reedy Creek Improvement District, in 1967.

    2. Their size

    Image (c) Orlando Sentinel

    Walt Disney passed away in 1966, before plans were finalized, but his brother Roy immediately stepped in to ensure that the Florida Project was completed. Unfortunately, neither Roy nor anyone else in the new Disney leadership team could quite figure out how to pull off Walt’s ambitious futuristic city. Initial opening plans coalesced around the Magic Kingdom, and the final 1982 version of Epcot was a much scaled-down theme park version of Walt’s greatest dream.

    But what of the cities that had been created by state law? They were an essential part of the Disney government, and couldn’t simply be dismantled. So they were allowed to remain, frozen in time. Each city consists of a neat and tidy, but tiny, mobile home park. Residents own their homes, but pay nominal lot rent to Disney. According to a May 2015 article in the Orlando Sentinel, the combined population numbers just 44, with each family charged $75 per month for its lot. They have access to a private, gated fireworks viewing location on the banks of Bay Lake.

    3. Their residence requirements

    Image (c) Orlando Sentinel

    No one, including the residents themselves, appears to know exactly how people are selected to live in one of the cities. Residents are employees or retirees of Walt Disney World or RCID and their families, but of the thousands of people who meet these requirements, only a handful are selected to make the move. Once in, they tend to stay for years, even a lifetime. Moving back appears to be an option for those who move away, although it is not clear exactly how the process works.

    4. Their influence on Walt Disney World operations

    Despite their tiny size, the cities of Bay Lake and Lake Buena Vista faithfully perform their political duties. Each city has a mayor and a city council, chosen in open elections. Their numbers may be small, but the decisions made by the cities’ residents have a very real and powerful influence on Walt Disney World operations both large and small.

    At monthly city council meetings, they vote on everything from alcohol sales at theme park special events to law enforcement contracts with the Orange County Sheriff’s Office to transportation bonds for Downtown Disney. Like anywhere else, some votes are open only to council members, while others are open to all registered voters in the city. In the Sentinel article referenced above, residents insist that they do not just push through whatever measures Disney proposes, but take care to become informed about the issues and vote in the ways that they find best.

    5. They’re not Celebration

    Image - Simonhardt93, Wikimedia Commons

    Carefully master planned down to the tiniest detail, Celebration was Disney’s first attempt to build a version of Walt’s dream for a utopian city. Built in 1994, it incorporated elements of Walt’s futuristic dreams including a next-generation hospital and early fiber optic technology. But the overall look and feel was that of an idyllic small town, a sort of Main Street USA brought to life.

    Although the initial lottery brought more than 4,000 applications for just 500 available homes, Celebration proved that without Walt, running a city was simply not the best choice for Disney. The company sold most of its stake to a property management company in 2004. Since then, the town has been rocked by foreclosures, several violent crimes, and an increasing public suspicion of master planned communities, though it still has its fair share of supporters.

    While Celebration copes with the realities of the 21st century, Walt Disney World’s original company towns go on as they always have—tiny rural oases in the middle of one of the most visited destinations on Earth, where everyone still knows everyone in town. The lifestyle might not be for everyone, but there is something to be said for living somewhere that is effectively frozen in time.

    What do you think? Would you want to live in one of Disney’s company towns? Why or why not? Share your thoughts with us in the comments!