Take a stroll over to digital Walt Disney World over on reddit. Normally a festive little consumerist corner of the internet, now a downtrodden affair melting in tragedy. The concrete house of mouse, notorious for a lack of shade and unhealthy relationship with asphalt, broke cast members, rides, and guests. In other words, the systems designed for a climate of the past did not heed the warning of the displaced Mr. Toad's finale. Hell is, indeed, terrifying. And hot. Very, very hot.
Let's take a step back from that for a minute though. For the uninitiated, what would become Walt Disney World was a detour into something comfortable for a grieving company. Walt's last brain child before he died of lung cancer was largely scrapped for a near carbon copy of the humble Anaheim location. But bigger and transplanted to a sparsely populated swamp. To keep the encrouching businesses far away from "the happiest place on earth" the Magic Kingdom sat a good 10-20 minute drive from every property line. Two hotels, a theme park, and a very forward looking transportation network greeted the first guests. Frankly, it was quite beautiful. And it just felt cool, in a temperature sense. Trees, undisturbed sub tropical forests, rivers and creeks twisting through otherwise multilayered canopies. Canopies thick in a way reminiscent of crunchy peanut butter. So much packed into such little space. It was also an urban planning and transportation triumph for decades.
I admit, I am always impressed when I open plans and cases to show students what is possible in urban design and enginereering. I always point to the trash chutes whisking away your half eaten burger to a compost pile that helps make biofuel for a bus fleet. I marvel with the students at the tens, no, hundreds of thousands of people moving by bus, boat, monorail, train, tram, ski lift gondola, and car. The movement and storage for food, water, and sewage makes even a grizzly general weep over the logistical glory. I never, however, looked at HVAC. I did today.
Today, Lake Buena Vista, the "city" the resort claims, hit nearly 94 F. That's 34C and a few digits for the rest of the world. A humidity above 50, nay above 70. A whopping 85%. A "feels like" temperature of 111 F or 43 C on the asphalt addicted, shadeless, reflective surface that is Main Street, USA. Hotter in the stifling queues of Thunder Mountain. Inescapable in the theaters, showrooms, restaurants, and hotels. The air conditioning, bled into the air in open storefronts and buildings all across the resort, could not keep up. People on reddit complained, expecting compensation for the sweltering temps and bad cooling systems left over from the Eisner years. I read too many comments. Many not capable of coming to grips with just how overwhelmed the climate control system was. Perhaps ignoring the reality of today, and blaming a nameless subsystem somewhere behind a "cast members only" sign was a trauma response to dropping $10,000 on a weeks vacation to a place you could neither go outside in nor sit in a room to escape. I no longer looked at whimsical trash slides under a Pecos Bills. I think of cooling failure and the redditors unable to see, or face, the bigger problem. You can't engineer or complain your way out of an active environmental systems collapse. You also should not rip out all that cooling and fill the landscape with generic skyscraper hotels. Boy does Bay Lake and the Seven Seas Lagoon just look like a tragic case of Sketchup Contemporary Style now adays.
You see, Walt Disney World was designed for a world in a climate past. When an event like this was not only rare, but a statistical improbability. You engineered systems around much understood norms. Humidity stays in this range. Temperature that. Metals react in such a way. You stamp the approval and make an air duct. You leave trees off a street because its tough to maintain the sidewalk. You keep the doors to the candy store open because the cool air and the smell invite you to come in and buy. Get out of the heat, a rice krispie treats begs, and indulge. That's all gone. If not gone altogether, today was an indicator that it will be quite soon. If the over engineered everything in Mickey Town couldn't hold up, how screwed are our other systems? Very if the hospitals I know of are any indicator. Where HVAC matters a lot, and where a ten year old system can't filter out fungus anymore because its too humid. But back to theme parks.
I focus on one comment. That the Wilderness Lodge lost all cooling. Angering, how dare they fail, and two free room nights. I want to scream at the absurdity. You could die in such an environment. You can not evaporate your sweat in wet bulb conditions very close to what we saw in WDW today. You can go for a walk from Space Mountain to Splash, and simply die. Even for the in shape, which are few and far between amongst folks debating between another Dole Whip and an abnormally large Turkey leg, the walk is dangerous. But such guests asking for a few nights or a coupon for a $16 jack and coke (yes, that is typed right) aren't entirely off their rocker. I come to empathize a bit. They want compensation for a climate disaster in a way. More people are going to, as well, for everything from light rails failing commuters in Portland, farmers finding their crops rotting quicker. It makes me glad I'm not in insurance. I'm also very glad I don't have to be the 20 something college program intern facing an angry mom of 4 demanding a less melty Mickey Mouse Ice Cream Sandwhich. Both professions have a rather dismal future.
Alas, poor (Disney) World. I knew it, Beehawian.
Heat indices got above 130F (55C) at a couple of NOAA weather stations yesterday here in Texas. Austin tied its all-time record of 118F (~48C). The crucial difference being that we all just stay inside as much as possible, braving the elements only from building to vehicle and then back to building. Staying indoors defeats the entire purpose of a vacation to a theme park, so it's a wildly different situation.
And yes, dropping five figures to hang out in lethal heat isn't a great use of funds, so parkgoers being steamy is unsurprising.
thank you for using the correct plural of index.
your a hero to me and the fedi-pedant gang.
You're* π
(Also, [see: pedant] it's "the fedi-pedant gang and I.")
Agreed on the first nit. Wrong on the second one, as it's the object, not the subject, so "me" is correct, and there's not really a hard rule on what order they go in when accusative (this is one of those things where some let a nominative rule bleed over to objects). "You're a hero to I" isn't correct regardless of the compound object.
Ooh, that's super neat, thanks! I had a prescriptionist grandma who was an OG English & History teacher that drilled the "[other] and I" as a hard rule, back when, and I've not seen the explanation you've shared, but I see the logic of it, certainly. ππΌ
Working the copy desk long enough becomes a fight over prescriptivism vs. descriptivism. Just as a couple of examples, the AP was still hyphenating "teen-ager" into this century, which was impossible to see as correct in my early 20s, and "alright" was considered a bastardization of "all right." Language evolves faster than many realize, and clinging to old rules is good in some situations but uselessly dogmatic in others.
takes notes I enjoy these comments. I learn much from them.
Apologies for the trigger-happy comma, there. π«‘
see what i did there?
Powderhorn is a hero. Though I must offer a friendly and courteous chuckle at "your" given the context of your comment. π
that was the joke thoβ¦
Mind bogglingly hot. I think the hottest I ever got was on a remote airfield in July in a place.that actively worked at murdering you in a variety of ways. Heat was the worst.
Yet we are continuing to clear cut forested hills here in BC and put asphalt laden developments in place. Boggles the mind until you realize a fun combo of path dependency, corruption, greed, and law make it this way.