The ground outside Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin at Magic Kingdom has been mostly paved. A pair of covers have also been removed from holes in the wall next to the entrance doors.
Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin Construction

In our construction update just two days ago, two rectangles on the ground were filled with freshly poured concrete. Now most of the ground around them is also paved over. This leaves just a few patches of dirt closer to the doors.

One space has a bit of concrete that appears to have spilled over from the other sections. This is directly in front of a foundational element that may soon house a new sign.

Gray panels that were on the walls to either side of the entrance doors have been removed and set on the ground, revealing openings in the wall that expose structural steel and wood. The old entrance archway and decorations were removed from this area. New elements may be installed before the ride reopens.
For reference, below is what the ride entrance used to look like.
Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin

Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin is scheduled to reopen this spring with new and updated scenes, a new character, new ride vehicles, handheld blasters, and interactive targets.
Check out our last look at Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin and watch our POV video below.
If You Had Wings History
Before there was Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin, this omnimover in Tomorrowland went through a few different flight-based iterations. It began as If You Had Wings sponsored by Eastern Air Lines, which opened in 1972. If You Had Wings explored the history of flight.
The airline withdrew their sponsorship in 1987 and the ride became If You Could Fly. In 1989, Delta Air Lines began sponsoring the ride and it was renamed Delta Dreamflight.
When Delta’s sponsorship ended, the ride was just called Dreamflight from January 1996 to June 1996. It was then renamed again, this time to Take Flight. The ride saw various thematic changes over the years before closing for the Toy Story 2-inspired reimagining in January 1998.
Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin opened in October 1998, using the same ride track and vehicles as the original 1972 ride. Though inspired by the opening sequence of Toy Story 2, the Pixar film wouldn’t be released until November 1999.

Versions of the Buzz Lightyear shooting attraction have existed at all six Disney castle parks in the world. Buzz Lightyear Astro Blasters at Hong Kong Disneyland closed in 2017 to become Ant-Man and The Wasp: Nano Battle! The Tokyo Disneyland version closed in 2024 to be replaced by a Wreck-It Ralph attraction.
The technological updates to the Magic Kingdom ride and the Wreck-It Ralph ride are expected to be similar to Hong Kong Disneyland’s Ant-Man and The Wasp reimagining. Watch our full POV video of that attraction below.
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