Disney’s BoardWalk Resort on Crescent Lake is famous for its turn-of-the-century charm, channeling the classic mid-Atlantic seaside escapes of Atlantic City and Coney Island. But if you walk the wooden planks in June 2026, the quiet nostalgia is being drowned out by the sounds of heavy demolition. Massive construction walls have gone up around recently closed storefronts, signaling a major, unannounced mystery project slated to run through late 2026.
Credit: Chad Sparkes, Flickr
To understand what is happening behind the scrims, you have to realize that the BoardWalk we know today is a heavily watered-down version of the massive entertainment empire it was originally supposed to be.
The Lost Blueprint: Active Rides and Late-Night Clubs
When Walt Disney Imagineering first drew up plans for the EPCOT Resort Area in the early 1990s, the BoardWalk was designed to be an aggressive, high-energy counterstrike against Universal Studios Florida and downtown Orlando’s booming nightlife.
Legendary former Disney Imagineer Jim Shull recently pulled back the curtain on these original “blue-sky” concepts, revealing that the layout was meant to have a massive degree of kinetic energy. The initial plans included:
Images show both a Ferris Wheel and a roller coaster combined with a heavier than delivered 1920s classic pier. I was influenced by the original in designing #ParadisePier 2.0. https://t.co/FO21WITmFn
A Mechanical Midway: Actual amusement park rides and carnival structures built right onto the pier, giving the area a vibrant visual pulse visible across the lake.
Expanded Nightlife Hubs: A deeply layered matrix of high-capacity dance clubs, theatrical venues, and heavily themed dining spots.
Deep Urban Scale: A design that felt less like a hotel facade and more like a bustling coastal metropolis.
Ultimately, these grand plans crashed into operational reality. Imagineers ran into a fatal zoning conflict: noise. Mixing mechanical amusement rides and high-bass dance clubs directly underneath deluxe hotel rooms and Disney Vacation Club (DVC) villas was a guest relations nightmare waiting to happen. The rides were killed, the clubs were dialed back, and the BoardWalk opened in 1996 as a much tamer, boutique resort village.
The 2026 Demolition: Out with the 90s Kitsch
Thirty years later, Disney is systematically ripping down what remains of that 1990s compromise. The recent wave of closures—including the permanent shutdown of Big River Grille & Brewing Works and the total hollowing out of the central retail strip—has cleared the way for a dramatic modern pivot.
Credit: Mom2amara, Flickr
Public permits filed for the current 2026 construction blitz have revealed two intriguing corporate codenames for the mystery spaces: “Project Amazon”.
While Disney has kept official details under tight wraps, industry analysts predict a complete 1:1 functional replacement. “Project Amazon” (the old Big River Grille footprint) is highly rumored to become a sophisticated, high-end table-service restaurant targeting the wealthy conventioneers from the neighboring Swan & Dolphin. Meanwhile, “Project Bubbles” is expected to emerge as an upscale cocktail and champagne lounge.
Credit: Disney
A Premium Second Act
The era of over-designed thematic props and 90s neon kitsch is officially dead. By flattening the old, compartmentalized storefronts, Disney is transforming the BoardWalk into a streamlined, luxury-tier destination. While millennial fans and purists might look at Jim Shull’s original concept drawings and mourn the loss of a true Disney Coney Island, the 2026 wrecking crews prove that the promenade’s future belongs firmly to modern luxury.
Rick is an avid Disney fan. He first went to Disney World in 1986 with his parents and has been hooked ever since. Rick is married to another Disney fan and is in the process of turning his two children into fans as well. When he is not creating new Disney adventures, he loves to watch the New York Yankees and hang out with his dog, Buster. In the fall, you will catch him cheering for his beloved NY Giants.