Kids in wheelchairs and on the autism spectrum will find play areas in the newly renovated Mickey’s Toontown at Disneyland have been built from the ground up with their navigation and sensory needs in mind.
Walt Disney Imagineering has designed the refreshed Mickey’s Toontown returning on Sunday, March 17 at the Anaheim theme park with an eye toward removing as many barriers to play as possible and creating experiences for kids with differing needs and abilities.
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Special needs kids with physical, developmental, behavioral, emotional and sensory disorders and disabilities will find Mickey’s Toontown a welcoming, playful and calming place.
“We’re going to try to make sure we’re thinking about every single guest in here, making sure that every little one who comes to play here feels like we’ve designed the space for them,” Imagineering Executive Portfolio Producer Jeff Shaver-Moskowitz said during a media preview of Toontown.
The curb-free Toontown will have wheelchair accessible ramps and pathways where kids can roll without obstacles or barriers.
The Centoonial Park fountain at the center of the land will have interactive play areas with water tables at lower heights for children’s wheelchairs.
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The new Dreaming Tree inspired by the place where Walt Disney daydreamed as a boy in his hometown of Marceline, Missouri will have wheelchair pathways through a maze of sculpted undulating roots.
The Fort Max elevated play area will have a ramp so kids can reach the overlook outpost. Nearby, a roller slide down an embankment hill will have a dedicated landing area where kids will have time to get back in their wheelchairs without pressure to get out of the way for the next slider.
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