The transformation of Walt Disney World is moving at a blistering pace as construction crews in Disney’s Animal Kingdom actively dismantle DinoLand U.S.A. The goal is to clear a path for the brand-new Tropical Americas land—officially named Pueblo Esperanza—slated to open in 2027. While fans know that the upcoming Indiana Jones ride will utilize the rugged Enhanced Motion Vehicle (EMV) track layout left behind by the former DINOSAUR attraction, Disney has promised a completely original, global-first expedition through a mysterious, unmined Maya temple.

The technical secrets of how Disney Imagineers plan to terrify audiences inside this ancient temple have started to spill out into the open. On June 4, 2026, a massive new patent assigned to Disney Enterprises was officially published, showcasing a never-before-seen special effect. The document outlines a “3-D extendable projection surface” capable of appearing from thin air, dynamically distorting in mid-air, and completely retracting from view. This breakthrough directly addresses a decades-old theme park limitation and signals a historic leap forward for Disney's practical illusion design.
Disappearing Acts: Overcoming Static Props
In the field of themed entertainment, creating terrifying environmental hazards—such as a sudden tornado, a localized flash flood, or a shifting supernatural entity—is an immense operational challenge. Traditionally, theme parks have relied on large, static physical props that permanently inhabit a ride showroom.

The issue with this legacy approach is simple: guests can see the prop sitting idly in the dark long before the effect triggers, and they can keep looking back at it after their vehicle passes. This early exposure completely spoils the surprise, reveals the room's structural mechanics, and shatters the rider's immersion.
Disney’s newly unveiled patent solves this dilemma. Instead of a physical prop that stays in the room, the mechanism creates a highly dynamic physical structure that exists only when the show scene demands it, instantly vanishing the moment the ride vehicle leaves the area.
How the Shape-Shifting Canvas Works
At its technical core, this newly patented system acts as a shape-shifting architectural canvas. The mechanism consists of a highly flexible, deformable textured skin—such as a specialized theatrical fabric like Dacron—stretched tightly over a sequence of internal structural elements.

The internal framework resembles a series of concentric rings or hoops that progressively shrink in size. When the ride's control computer triggers the scene, a system of specialized winches and linear actuators dynamically pulls on internal rigging cables. This action extends the fabric structure outward from a hidden ceiling or floor cavity, instantly guiding the material into a fully realized three-dimensional shape, such as a cone, funnel, or pyramid.
Once fully deployed, external media projectors apply high-resolution projection mapping directly onto the outside of the fabric. Simultaneously, internal lighting components illuminate the structure from within. To make the illusion even more unsettling, the patent describes an optional internal, movable object that can travel up and down the interior of the hoop structure. This internal component casts a shifting shadow through the translucent exterior fabric, creating the distinct, eerie impression that something alive is trapped and actively moving inside the effect.
The Imagineer Connection: The Smoking Gun
While Disney frequently files speculative patents that never see the light of day, the specific names attached to this filing make it an incredibly safe bet for the upcoming Indiana Jones attraction.

The patent officially credits two primary inventors:
- Charles Jacob Sedor
- Brianna Lee Pfost
Both are prominent, active field Imagineers who are currently assigned to the Indiana Jones ride project for the Tropical Americas land. Furthermore, during past public presentations detailing the creative vision for Pueblo Esperanza, Pfost specifically used a theoretical example of a ride hazard, describing the unique psychological terror of coming face-to-face with a destructive, spinning tornado. With the publication of this patent, that exact tornado concept has transitioned from a creative pitch into a concrete engineering blueprint.
One Tech, Infinite Configurations of Terror
Because the cable-and-hoop design allows for extreme structural flexibility, the patent outlines several distinct ways this temporary physical canvas can deform and manipulate its shape in real-time:

| Effect Type | Structural Movement | Theoretical Ride Application |
| The Descending Tornado | Internal rings shift and wobble against each other. | A cyclonic funnel cloud drops from the temple ceiling right over the vehicle. |
| The Reaching Monster Arm | Structure expands horizontally out of a hidden wall cavity. | A giant tree root or mythical temple creature rapidly grows toward riders. |
| The Erupting Fountain | Internal rigging pushes upward from a floor cavity. | A violent burst of mystical water or an ancient altar materializes instantly. |
When the encounter concludes, the actuators reverse, nesting the structural hoops flat inside one another and pulling the entire fabric apparatus cleanly out of the guests' sightlines. When Pueblo Esperanza opens its gates in 2027, Indiana Jones’s latest expedition won't just be a thrilling ride—it will deliver a jaw-dropping leap forward in practical theme park illusions.



