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Disney World Officially Alters Animal Kingdom Location’s Indefinite Closure

Animal kingdom Park entrance
Credit: Disney

Disney’s Animal Kingdom is in the middle of one of the most transformative periods in its history.

Guests walking in front of the Tree of Life at Disney's Animal Kingdom Theme Park.
Credit: Steven Miller, Flickr

Across the park, construction walls, new entertainment offerings, and major expansion projects are reshaping the guest experience. The biggest of those changes can be found in the former DinoLand U.S.A., where crews continue work on the massive Tropical Americas project that will eventually bring new attractions based on Encanto (2021) and  the Indiana Jones franchise to Walt Disney World. The multi-year overhaul will replace the park’s dinosaur-themed land with Pueblo Esperanza, a new area inspired by the cultures, landscapes, and wildlife of Central and South America when it opens in 2027.

Construction has accelerated throughout 2026, with much of DinoLand now gone and visible progress continuing behind construction walls. Disney has already confirmed that the new land will include an Indiana Jones adventure utilizing the existing DINOSAUR ride system, an Encanto-influenced family attraction, a carousel, dining locations, and other experiences designed to fit Animal Kingdom’s conservation-focused identity.

Concept art for Indiana Jones ride in Disney World's Tropical Americas area in Animal Kingdom
Credit: Disney

At the same time, Animal Kingdom has welcomed an entirely different addition aimed at younger guests.

On May 26, Disney officially launched Bluey’s Wild World at Conservation Station as part of its Cool KIDS’ Summer offerings. The experience brought Bluey and Bingo to Walt Disney World alongside interactive games, character encounters, and activities inspired by the wildly popular Australian animated series. Disney also promoted a companion experience known as Jumping Junction, where guests would be able to encounter animals native to Australia.

Almost immediately, however, guests noticed something was missing. While Bluey’s Wild World opened as scheduled, Jumping Junction remained inaccessible.

disney family wears new bluey merch at animal kingdom
Credit: Disney

The area occupies the former Affection Section petting zoo space at Rafiki’s Planet Watch and was reimagined as an Australian wildlife habitat. Disney originally advertised opportunities to see kangaroos and wallabies within the new environment, helping connect Bluey’s Australian roots to Animal Kingdom’s educational mission.

Yet despite animals already being visible within the habitat, guest pathways remained blocked off for weeks after Bluey’s Wild World debuted.

Reports from guests and cast members indicated that Disney was allowing the animals additional time to acclimate to their new surroundings before introducing regular guest traffic. The closure had no announced end date, leaving many visitors wondering when the attraction would begin operating as originally intended. Earlier soft-opening periods for Bluey’s Wild World specifically excluded Jumping Junction for that reason.

Bluey (L) and Bingo (R) for Disney theme parks
Credit: Disney

For a while, it appeared the closure could continue indefinitely.

On June 9, Disney quietly altered the status of the attraction by allowing select guests to enter Jumping Junction for the first time, per Kenny the Pirate. Rather than announcing a formal opening ceremony or issuing a press release, the park conducted what appeared to be a limited operational test, effectively soft-opening the experience to visitors. The move represented the first significant change to the attraction’s status since Bluey’s Wild World launched in May. Another soft opening also happened on June 10.

Guests who participated in the test were able to walk through designated pathways while observing the habitat’s Australian residents. Unlike the former Affection Section, the experience is not designed as a petting zoo. Instead, it functions as a walkthrough wildlife exhibit where guests can observe animals from carefully controlled viewing areas.

big tree of life at disneys animal kingdom
Credit: Erica Lauren, Inside the Magic

The limited opening also suggests Disney is becoming increasingly confident that the animals are adapting successfully to their new environment.

Disney now has an operating schedule on its official website confirming when all guests will be able to access the attraction without restrictions. The fact that visitors were permitted inside at all marked a substantial shift from the attraction’s previous status, when barriers completely prevented guest access.

In practical terms, Disney has already altered what many guests viewed as an indefinite closure. The soft opening demonstrated that operational testing was underway and that the attraction was entering its final evaluation phase. For guests planning future visits to Animal Kingdom, it’s encouraging that the full Bluey’s Wild World experience will operate as originally advertised.

The entrance to Disney World's Animal Kingdom theme park.
Credit: Lee (myfrozenlife), Flickr

The timing is notable as Animal Kingdom continues balancing large-scale expansion projects with new offerings throughout the park. While the Tropical Americas transformation remains the resort’s most ambitious undertaking at the park, smaller additions such as Bluey’s Wild World show Disney is still looking for ways to add fresh experiences for guests in the present rather than waiting for 2027’s major debut.

For now, Jumping Junction is still in its early stages, and after weeks of uncertainty, Disney has finally taken steps toward completing the near Conservation Station area. And for visitors who have been waiting to see Animal Kingdom’s newest Australian residents up close, that change may be the most important update yet.

What do you think of the new area at Disney’s Animal Kingdom? Are you looking forward to the upcoming Tropical Americas land at the Walt Disney World Resort? Let us know in the comments down below!

About Thomas Hitchen

When he’s not thinking about the Magic Kingdom, Thomas is usually reading a book, becoming desperately obsessed with fictional characters, or baking something delicious (his favorite is chocolate cake -- to bake and to eat). He's a dreamer and grew up on Mulan saving the world, Jim Hawkins soaring through the stars, and Padmé Amidala fighting a Nexu. At the Parks, he loves to ride Everest, stroll down Main Street with an overstuffed pin lanyard around his neck, and eat as many Mickey-shaped ice creams as possible. His favorite character is Han Solo (yes, he did shoot first), and his favorite TV show is Buffy the Vampire Slayer except when it's One Tree Hill. He loves sandy beach walks, forest hikes, and foodie days out in the Big City. Thomas lives in England, UK, with his fiancée, baby, and their dog, a Border Collie called Luna.

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