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Epcot Center Drive west – Walt Disney World: Western terminus; continues west as Epcot Center Drive: 0.580: 0.933: I-4 to US 192 – Orlando, Tampa: I-4 exit 67 2.034: 3.273: SR 535 to I-4 – Kissimmee, Orlando: Eastern terminus International Drive / World Center Drive east to SR 417 north – International Airport, Sea World, Convention Center
EPCOT is a theme park at the Walt Disney World Resort in Bay Lake, Florida. It is owned and operated by The Walt Disney Company through its Disney Experiences division. The park opened on October 1, 1982, as EPCOT Center —the second of four theme parks built at the resort.
U.S. Route 192 (US 192) is an east–west route of the United States Numbered Highway system in central Florida.It runs 75.04 miles (120.77 km) from U.S. Route 27 (State Road 25) in Four Corners, Lake County, east past Walt Disney World and through Kissimmee, St. Cloud and Melbourne, to end at State Road A1A in Indialantic, one block from the Atlantic Ocean.
It was privately owned by the Walt Disney World Company, [1] and was used to launch aircraft used in the "Skyleidoscope" and "Surprise in the Skies" shows at the Epcot theme park. Although still listed active in FAA records as recently as September 2010, [1] this facility closed for theme park use in 1992, when Surprise in the Skies ended.
In addition to relying primarily on fossil fuels and nuclear energy from the state's power grid, Walt Disney World has two solar energy facilities on property; a 22-acre (0.034 sq mi; 0.089 km 2) Mickey Mouse-shaped solar panel farm near EPCOT, and a 270-acre (0.42 sq mi; 1.1 km 2) facility near Disney's Animal Kingdom. [103]
EPCOT, the modified vision of Walt Disney's dream for an “Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow,” opened its turnstiles for guests 40 years ago. While its mission statement looks to the ...
The Transportation and Ticket Center (commonly abbreviated TTC) is an intermodal transportation hub served by monorails, ferries, and buses at the Walt Disney World Resort. The station serves all three lines of the Walt Disney World Monorail System, as well as conventional bus and taxis in the Greater Orlando Region.
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