accommodations

Written by @Pi on my Cake

New York Wing

This Wing sticks to the look of the Lobby pretty closely considering much of it faces inward and overlooks it. Like the whole hotel, there is a strong focus on a classy, art deco style. This wing specifically has a Great Gatsby, 20s era New Money feel to it. The color scheme is very warm with plenty of gold plating, bronze accents, and wood paneling. The theming is subtle as this is a luxury hotel, but scattered around are some props and decorations that add to the story of the New Money New York Mansion. Paintings of lifestyles of the rich and famous in the Roaring 20s, pictures of the fancy cars the wealthy would drive, and fancy hats that are the height of fashion at the time hung on hooks on the walls. There are also some balloons and streamers to represent the extravagant parties that were so beloved by New York's Elite in this era.

Standard Room - Avg. Rate: $800 a night

The Standard Room has Two Queen Beds, a desk, a pull out couch, and a balcony. There is also a variant with a King Bed and a comfy chair instead of the two queen beds. The walls feature art of the New York skyline of the 1920s and the sheets/shower curtains have designs inspired by flapper fashion trends of the era.


Standard Room (Park View) - Avg. Rate: $1050 a night

Same as the Standard Room, but with a balcony that looks out over the lake toward Disneyland 1986.


2 Bedroom Premium Suite - Avg. Rate: $2300 a night

This room type features a kitchenette, one bedroom with a king bed, one bedroom with a queen bed, a small living room with a pull out couch, and a balcony. The theming is roughly the same as the standard room, but the king bedroom has more of a focus on art deco design and the queen bedroom has more of a focus on the vintage automobiles of the era.


2 Bedroom Premium Suite (Park View) - Avg. Rate: $2500 a night

Same as the regular Premium Suite, but with a balcony that looks out over the lake toward Disneyland 1986.


Oswald's Great Gala Dream Suite - Avg. Rate: $3100 a night

The Dream Suites serve as more heavily themed family suites for the hotel. They all have a park view balcony. There is a kitchenette, one room with a king bed, one bedroom with a bunk bed, a living room with a pull out couch, a complementary (exclusive to the resort) "Roaring 20s Oswald" plush in the kids room, and a balcony. This one is themed to the grand parties of the roaring 20s with Oswald the Lucky Rabbit as the Gatsby style "host" for the gala. Light fixtures made to look like silver and gold balloons, a bottle of sparkling cider included with the room, confetti imprinted on the walls, paintings with dance step instructions for classic moves from the 20s, artwork of Oswald dancing with his party guests, etc.

hollywood wing

This wing is themed to the glitz and glamour of 1920s Hollywood. As with the whole hotel interior, there is a classy art deco focus, though the warm color scheme of the central New York Wing is replaced with a more metallic color scheme with shiny silvers and grays, glossy blacks, and matte golds. Artwork depicting movie premiers and film sets from the 20s line the walls. Occasional bits of vintage camera equipment and similar props are spread around, but as this is a luxury hotel the theming is kept subtle. The carpet in the hallways is red with gold accents meant to subtly evoke a red carpet premiere.

Standard Room - Avg. Rate: $800 a night

The Standard Room has Two Queen Beds, a desk, a pull out couch, and a balcony. There is also a variant with a King Bed and a comfy chair instead of the two queen beds. The walls feature art of the LA skyline of the 1920s and the sheets/shower curtains have designs inspired by fashion trends of the movie stars of the era.


Standard Room (Courtyard View) - Avg. Rate: $850 a night

Same as the Standard Room, but with a balcony that looks out over the courtyard with the pool for this wing.


Standard Room (Park View) - Avg. Rate: $1050 a night

Same as the Standard Room, but with a balcony that looks out over the lake toward Disneyland 1986.


1 Bedroom Premium Suite - Avg. Rate: $1800 a night

This room type features a kitchenette, one bedroom with a king bed, a small living room with a pull out couch, and a balcony. The theming is roughly the same as the standard room, but the bedroom has more of a focus on film industry awards with a trophy shelf for fictional prizes.


1 Bedroom Premium Suite (Park View) - Avg. Rate: $2000 a night

Same as the regular Premium Suite, but with a balcony that looks out over the lake toward Disneyland 1986.


Mickey and Minnie's Superstar Dream Suite - Avg. Rate: $3000 a night

The Dream Suites serve as more heavily themed family suites for the hotel. They all have a park view balcony. There is a kitchenette, one room with a king bed, one bedroom with a bunk bed, a living room with a pull out couch, a complementary (exclusive to the resort) "20s Hollywood Starlet Minnie Mouse" plush in the kids room, and a balcony. This one is themed to a Hollywood Movie Premiere! A red carpet near the entrance, a dimmer in the living room for theater lighting, lamps styled after camera flash bulbs of the paparazzi, posters of parodies of famous films from the 20s with Mickey and Minnie as the leads, etc. There is even an applause sound effect that plays when you turn on the light switch near the front door. The king bedroom is loosely themed to the famous Chinese theater while the kids bedroom has some props and painted backdrops on the walls to make it feel almost like a set for a film.

Chicago Wing

This wing is themed to the lavish lifestyles the heads of the criminal underworld enjoyed in this stylistic interpretation of 1920s Chicago Gangsters. More based on movies and stories than reality. As with the whole hotel interior, there is a classy art deco focus, though the warm color scheme of the central New York Wing is replaced with a more cold color scheme with sleek silvers/grays, matte blacks, and various shades of blues. Artwork depicting Capone style gangsters of the 20s line the walls. Occasional bits of jazz instruments, bright red roses, fedoras, and similar props spread around, but as this is a luxury hotel the theming is kept subtle.

Standard Room - Avg. Rate: $800 a night

The Standard Room has Two Queen Beds, a desk, a pull out couch, and a balcony. There is also a variant with a King Bed and a comfy chair instead of the two queen beds. The walls feature art of the Chicago skyline of the 1920s and the sheets/shower curtains have designs inspired by the pinstripe suits of the era.


Standard Room (Courtyard View) - Avg. Rate: $850 a night

Same as the Standard Room, but with a balcony that looks out over the courtyard with the pool for this wing.


Standard Room (Park View) - Avg. Rate: $1050 a night

Same as the Standard Room, but with a balcony that looks out over the lake toward Disneyland 1986.


1 Bedroom Premium Suite - Avg. Rate: $1800 a night

This room type features a kitchenette, one bedroom with a king bed, a small living room with a pull out couch, and a balcony. The theming is roughly the same as the standard room, but the bedroom has more of a focus on the gold plated luxury of the mafia elite.


1 Bedroom Premium Suite (Park View) - Avg. Rate: $2000 a night

Same as the regular Premium Suite, but with a balcony that looks out over the lake toward Disneyland 1986.


Goofy's Gangster Dream Suite - Avg. Rate: $3000 a night

The Dream Suites serve as more heavily themed family suites for the hotel. They all have a park view balcony. There is a kitchenette, one room with a king bed, one bedroom with a bunk bed, a living room with a pull out couch, a complementary (exclusive to the resort) "20s Mob Boss Goofy" plush in the kids room, and a balcony. This one is themed to a Gangster hide out tucked in a Speak Easy! There are exposed pipes to add to the hidden feeling, the doors to each bedroom are designed to look like hidden secret doors, there is a wall of bottles with labels that parody famous alcohol brands but with Disney puns that doubles as a creative light fixture, etc. The king bedroom is themed to a noir style private detective office with a newspaper clippings on the walls of Goofy's suspected heists. The kid's bedroom is themed to the mafia's hide out with the walls painted like dark alleys and heisted treasures hidden around.​

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