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Walt Disney and the Quest for Community

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During the final months of his life, Walt Disney was consumed with building an experimental community to help solve urban problems. His team's preliminary planning at the time of his death in 1966 drew freely from the technology of American industry to house, employ, entertain, and educate residents and millions of visitors. Disney called the concept the 'Experimental Prototype community of Tomorrow', or EPCOT. It was the most ambitious project he would ever undertake. This beautifully written, instantly engrossing volume focuses on the original concept of EPCOT.

290 pages, Paperback

First published December 23, 2002

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Celena.
71 reviews
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November 27, 2025
awesome for my research! laid everything out super well going through the history and development of the original EPCOT concept.

this fed my 7th grade Disney phase. i love when you get into academia and you can write about silly things that interested you from when you were 14. embarrassing to admit but i know more disney trivia than i should and this was very fun for me
Profile Image for John Singh.
92 reviews4 followers
November 4, 2019
While a bit dry and reading more like a research paper than a narrative, this is nonetheless a fascinating read for anyone with a serious interest in Disney, EPCOT, or urban and transportation planning and design. Those who love Walt Disney World as it exists today — or who enjoy following The Walt Disney Company as it became — may be quite surprised to learn just how serious Walt Disney was about his plans to build a “city of the future,” and as someone who thought he knew a great deal about EPCOT, “Walt Disney and the Quest for Community” revealed quite a lot I didn’t know ... including just how deeply the project had been considered, and how very close it came to moving forward prior to Disney’s death.

What this book lacks is narrative finesse and thrust to pull it all together. It’s a recitation of remarkable — and often little-known — facts, but it lacks a certain cohesion and style. It’s supported by lackluster images and sometimes too-obvious observations.

And yet, there’s every reason to plod through some of the more dull and obtuse writing, because both Disney and the U.S. could use more of the EPCOT-style vision — and because it’s rather a surprise to learn just how grounded in real issues and concerns EPCOT was.

This is much more than just an analysis of a “failed” theme park, and Illuminates more than just what Walt Disney wanted to do with his EPCOT city. It also reveals why EPCOT the theme park became what it did ... and why it’s so desperately sad and depressing to know that it has declined from such a shockingly grand idea to just another in a series of “Disney Parks.”

For really serious Disney enthusiasts or those genuinely interested in urban-planning and transportation issues, this is very much worth the effort.
90 reviews15 followers
August 12, 2011
A very solid supplemental reading to other Walt Disney and Walt Disney World biographical books. Focused on EPCOT and what it was originally meant to be (in Walt Disney's eyes), the book does a good job of summing up sections of other books such as Project Future or Bob Thomas' Walt Disney: An American Original. I feel it was good I had read those books prior to this one, as they helped paint a larger picture of the story going into Walt Disney and the Quest For Community and its cutting of corners at times.

All of this being said, this book is thoroughly researched and feels very academic due to its constant sourcing of references. There is lots of new material to be found here, plus a good summary of information that can be found elsewhere. The most fascinating chapter was the last one, which speaks about "EPCOT After Disney." Thanks to the references at the end of the chapter, I have now found a couple of other books to add to my wish list.

Overall, while it shouldn't be a replacement to the other books I mentioned above, it definitely is a must-read for those who are interested in EPCOT, urban development and the like. Consider checking it out.
Profile Image for Natalie.
Author 53 books535 followers
March 22, 2012
Fascinating, if scholarly, look at Walt's desire to redefine urban planning.
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