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6 Abandoned Places in EPCOT in Desperate Need of Life

Charlie

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Walt Disney once said, “For anything to have progress, change is required,” and it is especially true within Disney Parks. We’ve seen so many changes throughout the years, from entire lands being closed or opened, rides getting an entire makeover, and even seeing beloved characters like Mickey get a little refresh.


Spaceship Earth


EPCOT is one of those parks that has had massive changes throughout the years, and to be honest, we still crave some of the EPCOT before it changed. While some changes were turned into other parts, some were just completely left alone and abandoned. Some of the spaces do have something inside, but just aren’t like their previous versions.



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Wonders of Life​


Wonders of Life opened to much fanfare at EPCOT in 1989. The pavilion, dedicated to health care, the human body, physical fitness, medicine, and nutrition, was initially a hit thanks to the advanced-for-the-time simulator attraction Body Wars and the popular Cranium Command show. However, as EPCOT evolved with the additions of Test Track, Mission Space, and Soarin’ in the late 90s and early 2000s, its popularity sagged.


The Wonders of Life Pavilion


The pavilion closed in 2007 and, for the next decade, was used as a temporary Festival Center during the park’s annual events. In 2019, Disney announced plans to turn the space into the new Play! Pavilion, which would be themed to be an “interactive futuristic city where guests would be able to interact with a variety of Disney characters.”


©Disney || Play Pavilion Concept Art


At the time, planned attractions for Play! were announced to include an Animation Academy-like experience where Edna Mode teaches guests to draw, the Hotel Heist interactive game hosted by Zootopia’s Judy Hopps and Nick Wilde, an Arcade, a Monorail Mark X, and a water balloon fight video game experience with various Disney characters.


©Disney


As with many projects during this period, work on the Play! Pavilion was paused. However, unlike much of the rest of EPCOT’s “reimagining”, work never resumed. In 2023, Disney confirmed that the space was being “reevaluated” and that the former Wonders of Life has remained vacant since, a massive “black hole” ironically standing between two space-based attractions: Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind and Mission Space.


©Wikipedia

Odyssey Restaurant​


Located between the former Future World and World Showcase, Odyssey has held many roles over EPCOT’s lifespan. During the park’s first decade, the structure was home to The Odyssey Restaurant as well as a center for first aid, lost children, and baby services. The restaurant, which featured a performance stage, closed in 1994, and the building became a flexible private event space for the next two decades.


The Odyssey


Beginning in 2016, Odyssey was repurposed into a space for EPCOT’s festivals, currently serving as the home of Brew-Wing Lab during EPCOT International Food & Wine Festival, Holiday Hearth Desserts during EPCOT International Festival of the Holidays, Figment’s Imagination Station during EPCOT International Festival of the Arts, and The Citrus Blossom during EPCOT International Flower & Garden Festival.

https://www.disneyfoodblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Magical Guides-Brew-Wing-at-the-Odyssey-Food-and-Wine-EPCOT-Festivals-WDW-Aug-28-2025-6-2-700x525.jpg
Inside Brew Wing


In addition, the space has hosted temporary exhibitions on EPCOT ’s history and its late 2010s “reimagining.” However, while the space isn’t abandoned in the same way that Wonders of Life is, we can’t help but think that much more could be done with it.

The Outpost​


Located between the World Showcase’s China and Italy Pavilions, the Outpost is an outlier area. It features themed rock work and a small snack bar, all of which seem somewhat temporary in nature… because it was.


Refreshment Outpost


Originally, the small setup was built the year after the park opened and was meant to be a placeholder until the planned Equatorial Africa Pavilion was built. The issue? That pavilion was never built — and now likely never will be, thanks to a combination of Animal Kingdom’s existence and Disney’s reluctance to add to World Showcase. So, The Outpost stands as an anomaly, a small area, forever a preview to an abandoned project.


©Disney

The Former Millennium Village/World Showplace​


Moving from the (former Future World to World Showcase, our next stop is the former Millennium Village, located near the U.K. Pavilion. The centerpiece of the park’s Millennium Celebration, this purpose-built 60,000-square-foot area housed exhibits — ranging from small presentations to elaborately themed environments, and even a virtual reality “ride” — showcasing countries that weren’t represented in World Showcase proper, including Brazil, Chile, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, and others.


©shopDisney


The Millennium Village opened in October of 1999 and became quite popular, so much so that many hoped the concept might become a permanent part of EPCOT after the celebrations ended. However, that wasn’t meant to be, as the village closed when the celebration ended in January of 2001. Sometimes, the space is used for EPCOT festivals or for merchandise, like when Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure opened. It can also be used for other special events that aren’t open to the public, but for ht emost part, the space sits empty, and we couldn’t help but crave something great coming in!


World Showplace Pavilion

Germany’s Abandoned Attraction​


During EPCOT’s design, the Germany Pavilion was meant to include a boat ride attraction based on a cruise down the Rhine River. As described in Disney’s 1976 annual report, the then-scheduled-for-opening-day attraction was to be “… a cruise down Germany’s most famous rivers — the Rhine, the Tauber, the Ruhr, and the Isar. Detailed miniatures of famous landmarks will also be seen, including one of the Cologne Cathedral.”


©Disney


The attraction was still on schedule to be built as EPCOT was under construction, to the point where the load/unload portion of the ride’s show building, as well as an entrance gate to the queue, was built at the back of the pavilion. However, budget issues led to the ride being postponed to EPCOT’s “phase 2.” As usual, when a project is pushed ahead in such a way, the attraction was eventually quietly canceled, and the space still sits abandoned.


The attraction would have been around here

The Imagination Pavilion​


Circling back to the World Showcase, we’ve arrived at our final destination: The Imagination Pavilion. While not technically physically abandoned, many would argue that the pavilion and its attractions were abandoned by Disney decades ago.


Imagination Pavilion


This wasn’t always the case, however. Beginning in 1983, the pavilion had been home to Journey Into Imagination, a tour de force attraction which starred the whimsical scientist Dreamfinder and his purple dragon assistant Figment.


©Disney | Dreamfinder


The Omnimover dark ride took guests on an adventure through the concept of imagination, with the two lead characters as their guides, all set to the iconic song “One Little Spark”. The ride was complemented by a 3D film attraction. Initially, this was Magic Journeys, then the Michael Jackson-starring Captain EO, and finally Honey, I Shrunk the Audience.


©Disney | Let’s be honest, the original was the best!


Things changed in the late 1990s, when Disney closed the iconic attraction thanks to a new deal with then-sponsor Kodak, and it reopened as Journey into YOUR Imagination. The new ride replaced Dreamfinder and Figment with Eric Idle’s Honey, I Shrunk the Audience character Dr. Nigel Channing and physically changed the ride, shortening the track and removing nearly all of its best-loved elements.


Figment


Reaction to the ride was so negative that Disney closed the attraction and haphazardly refurbished it into Journey Into Imagination With Figment, a light retheme that jammed Figment into the ride wherever possible. While slightly better than the version it replaced, the ride didn’t hold a candle to the original. For most of the last two decades, fans have clamored for the ride to be refurbished to something close to its former glory, yet Disney has let it sit as is.


Journey into Imagination


Meanwhile, Honey, I Shrunk the Audience was replaced by Captain EO (ironically, the film it had replaced over a decade earlier). After that comeback had run its course, the theater became home to a Pixar short film festival and has remained so for the last decade.


Pixar Short Film Festival


While there have been so many changes, so many areas of the park are feeling a little lost. We’ll be excited to see what Disney does with them in the future, but in the meantime, make sure you keep following Disney Food Blog for more.



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Which of these areas would you most like to see Disney revitalize? Let us know in the comments below.
 
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