As Pacific Wharf officially became San Fransokyo Square today, August 31, some other remnants of the old area have officially taken on a new designation in the Disneyland Resort app — permanently retiring the “Pacific Wharf” name in its entirety.
Pacific Wharf Ends, Remnants Categorized in Performance Corridor
The entire Golden Vine Winery complex, including Wine Country Trattoria, the Mendocino Terrace, Sonoma Terrace, and Magic Key Terrace is no longer part of Pacific Wharf — now being referred to as part of the “Performance Corridor” area. This alludes to the fact that the pathway this space rests beside has been historically and consistently used for parades and entertainment.
Even the restrooms have undergone this re-designation.
Meanwhile, changes have already occurred in the primary former Pacific Wharf area, where venues such as the Ghirardelli Soda Fountain and Chocolate Shop are now listed as part of San Fransokyo Square.
Disney California Adventure is Constantly Changing
California Adventure is no stranger to change, and Pacific Wharf is no exception. While the Lucky Fortune Cookery, Cocina Cucamonga, and entire Boudin section have remained relatively to their own devices over the years, longtime DCA visitors may recall visiting the old Mission Tortilla Factory, which once taught guests the process of tortilla-making and would offer free samples of corn and flour tortillas.
The park as a whole is mostly the same story. When browsing a guide map from DCA’s opening year (2001), the dramatic amount of dismantling, rebuilding, expansion, and re-theming becomes apparent. Several of these listed attractions are gone, unrecognizable today, or to many individuals, entirely unheard of. Bountiful Valley Farm, Golden Dreams, It’s Tough to Be a Bug, Superstar Limo, Jim Henson’s Muppet Vision 3-D, and Maliboomer have all ceased to exist. Other attractions, such as California Screamin’ and the Sun Wheel have been renamed and entirely renovated multiple times. The Sun Wheel alone has held three names: Sun Wheel, Mickey’s Fun Wheel, and the Pixar Pal-A-Round.
In the earliest years, Disney California Adventure — at the time known as Disney’s California Adventure Park — was divided into four lands: Sunshine Plaza, Hollywood Pictures Backlot, Golden State, and Paradise Pier. While It’s Tough to Be a Bug was an opening day attraction, the rest of what would become “a bug’s land” opened in 2002.
All four of the opening lands, and the 2002 expansion, are gone now. This map from 2012 shows the park roughly halfway through its lifespan thus far, and features the hefty amount of work done around the time of its re-dedication — the culmination of over $1 billion in add-ons when the park itself originally only cost around $600 million to create after the notion of a more expensive West Coast EPCOT fell through. Sunshine Plaza was razed and entirely re-constructed as Buena Vista Street. “a bug’s land” was replaced with Avengers Campus. Hollywood Pictures Backlot became Hollywood Land, and the Guardians of the Galaxy portion was absorbed into the aforementioned Campus. Golden State had subsections for quite some time, which eventually became lands of their own. Out of Golden State came Pacific Wharf, Grizzly Peak (previously a subsection known as Grizzly River Recreation Area), and Condor Flats (which eventually joined Grizzly Peak).
The most recent digital park map is depicted above. San Fransokyo Square is not yet reflected in the PDF version made available to guests online.
Paradise Pier lasted all the way up to 2018, until it also was re-imagined as Pixar Pier, and the portion of it that was not actually on the wooden boardwalk was separated into Paradise Gardens Park. Goofy’s Sky School and Mickey’s Silly Symphony Swings are the re-imagined Mulholland Madness and Orange Stinger. King Triton’s Carousel is now Jessie’s Critter Carousel. Monsters, Inc. Mike & Sulley to the Rescue! stands where Superstar Limo stood, as The Little Mermaid – Ariel’s Undersea Adventure occupies the original Golden Dreams space. Victorian-themed restaurants line a spot that was once host to a McDonald’s and boat-themed playground for children. Mickey’s PhilharMagic is in the mix. It’s been a dizzying reconfiguration to say the least. Detailed discussion on more specific restaurants, tiny attractions, and pathways that have come and gone could continue ad nauseam.
At this point in time, Grizzly River Run seems to be the only major opening day attraction in this park that has not changed in any dramatic way that’s significantly altered its core identity or purpose. Soarin’ Around the World does occasionally revert to a throwback Soarin’ Over California experience, but otherwise, Disney California Adventure is a park on the move, occasionally subverting its own California theme in favor of expanded intellectual property offerings.
Is Pacific Wharf’s end the conclusion of an era, too? What are your thoughts on this most recent transformation to the California Adventure landscape? Let us know in the comments.
For more Disneyland Resort news and info, follow Disneyland News Today on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. For Disney Parks news worldwide, visit WDWNT.