PHOTOS - Remy's Ratatouille Adventure construction from the air

Jul 29, 2019 in "Remy's Ratatouille Adventure"

Remy's Ratatouille Adventure construction - July 2019
Posted: Monday July 29, 2019 9:19am ET by WDWMAGIC Staff

Here is a look at the work currently taking place around Epcot's France pavilion for the construction of Remy's Ratatouille Adventure. 

The ride, based on the popular attraction found at Disneyland Paris is still some way off from its Walt Disney World debut, with current estimates of a Spring 2020 opening.

Aerial photos for WDWMAGIC by Colin Chardavoyne @cchard.

 

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SplashJacketApr 14, 2024

Initially, Rat had 3 individual seats with dividers in between, but shortly after opening they removed the dividers and made it a front bench and a back bench. I’m not sure if they ever get up to 4 people (1 adult and 4 children for example) in the back, but they no longer have the capacity for single rider given it’s a bench with undefined seating (like MMRR). Alternatively, (and likely the more likely driver) too many Americans couldn’t fit between the dividers, causing delays and decreased guest satisfaction that exceeded any potential benefits from single-rider.

SoFloMagicApr 13, 2024

It was pictured in concept art. Single rider is pretty important for a 3-wide car

GuseyApr 13, 2024

I was wondering if they had single rider as it still exists at DLP

Surferboy567Apr 13, 2024

Gotta sell those genies. They better not pull that with the new Test Track.

SplashJacketApr 13, 2024

Interesting that it’s getting that high considering they axed single-rider at the 11th hour.

lentestaApr 13, 2024

Not to bump an old thread, but we measured Remy's hourly capacity at rope-drop this morning at 2,151 guests per hour. That's pretty close to the estimated 2,200/hour we've heard elsewhere.

Chef idea Mickey`=Mar 12, 2024

Why is Disney always responding right after Universal and not vice versa. Mmm

fuentesalexMar 05, 2024

It was. Felt not as immersive and even more like you are just watching a movie during the big screen sections.

marni1971Mar 05, 2024

It’s usually due to projector or glass cleaning maintenance

BasiltheBatLordMar 05, 2024

Not alleged, they're running it as a test until March 9. It's a cost-cutting measure.

Sir_CliffMar 05, 2024

I know they've done this before in Paris due to technical issues, so I'm not sure I'd read too much into it.

aladdin2007Mar 05, 2024

saving expense from replacing and or cleaning the glasses all the time? wouldn't surprise me, cost cutting moves.

Sorcerer MickeyMar 05, 2024

Universal allegedly downgraded King Kong from 3D to 2D as well. What's the trend here?

LittleBufordMar 04, 2024

This seems a bad move to me.