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25 interesting facts celebrating Animal Kingdom’s 25th anniversary

Disney’s Animal Kingdom, celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, came from the Walt Disney Company’s desire to create a park that would be a celebration of animals and their habitats.

The park is designed to be an immersive experience, taking visitors on a journey through a variety of different ecosystems, from the lush rainforests of Asia to the African savannah.

It opened its gates on April 22, 1998, after years of planning and development. The park is the fourth theme park to open at Walt Disney World and the largest at 580 acres. It’s so big that Magic Kingdom, EPCOT and Disney’s Hollywood Studios theme parks can fit inside Animal Kingdom. In fact, the entire Magic Kingdom park could fit in the Kilimanjaro Safaris savanna area.

Since its opening, Disney’s Animal Kingdom has undergone several expansions, including the addition of new attractions like Pandora – The World of Avatar.

Here are 25 fun and interesting facts about Disney’s Animal Kingdom Theme Park:

1. The current park location was not the first one Disney explored. The area now inhabited by the community of Celebration—you know, the town Disney built—was on the list of possible homes for the new theme park, according to Chuck Schmidt’s book “Disney’s Animal Kingdom: An Unofficial History.” 

“I remember being totally enamored with the huge oaks that were on the Celebration site, but it really had some de-watering problems, in terms of the amount of water that was on the site that would come to the surface of the ground,” Paul Comstock, Animal Kingdom’s lead landscape architect, is quoted in the book.

In addition, the Celebration site “is facing the wrong way. When you’d be driving on the Osceola Parkway, you’d be driving into the sunlight. The way that Animal Kingdom is oriented, you enter and the sun arc is behind your back, so it illuminates the trees, the structures, the Tree of Life, all the waterfalls,” he said.

2. In preparation for creating Disney’s Animal Kingdom, a core team of seven Walt Disney Imagineers, led by Creative Portfolio Executive Joe Rohde, crisscrossed the globe in search of the essential look of life in the wild. The team traveled more than 500,000 miles . . . a distance equal to circling the globe 20 times.

3. The area chosen for the park was particularly flat and sandy. To build up the ground, 60 dump trucks of dirt were delivered to the Animal Kingdom construction site every day for two years straight, equaling 4.4 million cubic yards of dirt.

4.  More than 4 million trees, plants, shrubs, ground-covers, vines, epiphytes and grasses from every continent on Earth — except Antarctica — were planted in the park.

5. One million square feet of rock work is placed around the park, that’s twice the volume of rock work in the sculptures on Mount Rushmore.

6. Some 1,500 2- to 3-foot-long fanciful hand-painted wooden folk art animal carvings — a fusion of pre-Columbian, Peruvian, African and Polynesian forms — were crafted on the island of Bali by native craftsmen and can be seen adorning the architecture of Discovery Island.

7.  Ten artists and three Imagineers worked full-time for 18 months to create the 325 animal carvings on The Tree of Life. Sculptors had between six and 10 hours to create each finished image before the plaster hardened.

A look at the oil rig construction taking place as the base of the Tree of Life. (From Disney video)

8. The Tree of Life is built on a reimagined oil rig as its base. The tree is 14 stories high and 50 feet wide at its trunk.

9. The Tree of Life is topped with more than 103,000 transparent, five-shades-of-green leaves that actually blow in the wind. —-hat each measure one foot long and are made from a special plastic.

10. The rutted safari road on the Kilimanjaro Safaris is part of the landscape design. The design team matched concrete with the surrounding soil, then rolled tires through it, and tossed stones, dirt and twigs into it to create an appropriately bumpy experience duplicating a remote African road.

11. In order to support the incredibly large and sophisticated dinosaur Audio-Animatronics at DINOSAUR in DinoLand U.S.A., their dino-sized bases were built through the structure all the way down to their own large foundations in the ground.

Expedition Everest. (Disney photo)

12.  At just under 200 feet tall, Expedition Everest is the tallest attraction at Walt Disney World Resort, followed by The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror at Hollywood Studios (199 feet), Magic Kingdom’s Cinderella Castle (189 feet), Spaceship Earth at Epcot (183 feet), Space Mountain at Magic Kingdom (180 feet) and The Tree of Life at Animal Kingdom (145 feet).

13. The landscape around Expedition Everest was created specifically to emulate the lowlands surrounding Mount Everest. More than 900 bamboo plants, 10 species of trees and 110 species of shrubs were planted over areas of the 6.2-acre terrain.

14. The mountain village anchoring the Expedition Everest attraction was built with architectural authenticity. The three-story mandir, a pagoda-type building, was hand carved with 1,000 yeti images in Nepal, then shipped, aged and re-assembled at the village, which is known as Serka Zong.

15. At least 8,000 props purchased mostly from Nepal add a lived-in look to the village and other areas of the Expedition Everest attraction.

Celebrating 25 years in 2023, Disney’s Animal Kingdom Theme Park introduced a new way for guests to appreciate, enjoy and be inspired by the magic of the natural world around them. On May 27, 2017, Pandora – The World of Avatar opens as the largest addition in the history of the park, allowing guests to step into the world of “Avatar.” (Photo by Disney)

16. In Pandora, there are 22 floating mountains in the Valley of Mo’ara and peak at about 130 feet above the valley floor. A team of more than 60 artisans from the U.S., Peru, France, Portugal, Japan and Ireland contributed to creating the art-scape of the floating mountains on Pandora – The World of Avatar.

17. There is 27 million gallons of water in Discovery River, enough water to fill 1,800 backyard swimming pools.

18. There are 2.6 million gallons of water contained in various water features that come in contact with animals. On average, the entire volume of water is treated and filtered five times daily, which means that 15.6 million gallons of water are treated and filtered every day.

19. The first birth at Animal Kingdom was a kudu, a large African antelope.

20. More than 150 species have reproduced at the park since it opened.

21. Animal Kingdom scientists have discovered two new vocalizations never before reported in elephants.

22. There was a boat ride at the theme park, but it was very short-lived. The Discovery River Boats opened the day the park opened but was re-themed twice during the next year until it finally closed for good on Aug. 21, 1999. The ride was not a hit with guests. It did not provide any additional entertainment or views that could not be seen on the walkways.

23. The original design for Animal Kingdom included a themed section called the Beastly Kingdom devoted to creatures of legend and mythology. Pandora – The World of AVATAR eventually was built in its place. The Beastly Kingdom was supposed to feature animals such as unicorns, dragons, and sea monsters with three different rides.

24. The Walt Disney theme parks have scattered “Hidden Mickeys” throughout its rides, buildings, architecture, and more. The Tree of Life is no exception: its Hidden Mickey can be found facing upside-down right above the hippopotamus’s eye.

25. There is one more fun Hidden Mickey of note. This one is on Kilimanjaro Safari ride. When you get to Flamingo island take a close look at it. The island is a Hidden Mickey.

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