If you ever doubted how quickly the operational wheels turn at Walt Disney World, this morning provided a stark reality check. Less than twelve hours after the final audience exited the building, the modern era of a Magic Kingdom classic was officially boarded up.

On Monday, July 6, 2026, guests stepping into Tomorrowland were met with a striking sight: the sweeping concrete ramps and automated sliding doors of Walt Disney’s Carousel of Progress were entirely cut off from the public. Freshly painted plywood construction walls now stand firmly in their place.
Disney's breakneck transition from an emotional fan farewell to an active construction zone marks the official start of a historic, multi-year project. The legendary rotating theater is scheduled to remain completely dark until its grand reimagining debuts in late 2027.
Clearing the Platform Past Midnight
The final day of the attraction's 1994 iteration on Sunday, July 5, drew massive crowds of local Annual Passholders, park traditionalists, and nostalgic fans. While Magic Kingdom officially closed its gates at 11:00 p.m., Tomorrowland operations had to adapt on the fly.
Because the outdoor platform was completely gridlocked with guests desperate for one final spin, operators bypassed standard park-closing cutoff rules. Cast Members continued running extra, unscheduled theater cycles for roughly 45 minutes past closing time to accommodate everyone in line. The final historic cycle wrapped up near midnight with an emotional, crowd-wide sing-along of “There's a Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow.”
The second the last guest cleared the Tomorrowland turnstiles, third-shift engineering crews and third-party contractors immediately seized the site. According to WDWMAGIC, a small section of construction walls was successfully erected overnight, securely blocking off the attraction's primary entrance and exit areas. More barriers are expected to push deeper into the plaza over the coming days as heavy equipment arrives.
Heavy Permits and Mechanical Gutting
This lightning-fast lockdown isn't just for show. Recent public permit filings managed by the Buena Vista Construction Company reveal that Disney is moving aggressively. The documents name both a specialized structural steel contractor and a premier specialist theming vendor as the project's primary partners.
Before any creative set construction can begin, crews must gut the building's physical infrastructure. The 62-year-old theater mechanism has suffered from severe operational wear and tear, frequently trapping guests in “carousel loops” due to sensor faults.
Contractors will use this extended downtime to remove the building’s antiquated hydraulic lines completely. Imagineering is retrofitting the entire multi-auditorium turntable with modern, highly responsive digital electric actuators, permanently eliminating mechanical stuttering and hydraulic fluid leaks.
A Brand-New Tomorrow: What's Coming in 2027
While seeing the construction walls is a bittersweet milestone for the Disney community, the scale of the creative transformation explains why Imagineers are wasting no time. Disney has confirmed that all four show scenes are being completely replaced to execute a 60-year chronological leap forward.

When the attraction reopens in late 2027, guests can expect a completely re-anchored timeline:
- The Walt Disney Prologue: The show will open with a highly sophisticated, lifelike Audio-Animatronic figure of Walt Disney himself, introducing the concept of progress using restored historical audio clips from his 1960s television appearances.
- Act 1 (The 1960s): Shifting to the summer of 1969, where the family gathers around a vintage console television to witness the historic Apollo moon landing.
- Act 2 (The 1980s): Moving to Halloween 1985, centering on the dawn of the household personal computer and early video game consoles.
- Act 3 (The Millennium): Capturing the nostalgic anxiety of New Year's Eve 1999, dial-up internet culture, and the rise of early cell phones.
- Act 4 (The Future Finale): A ground-up reimagining that discards the outdated 1990s virtual reality headsets in favor of a high-tech, off-planet colony based on original sketches by Disney Legend John Hench.

The heavy plywood walls dominating Tomorrowland are a clear signal that the “Year of the Dig” is moving full steam ahead, ensuring Walt Disney's beloved concept is safely fortified for a whole new generation.



