The second-highest grossing Disney animated film of all-time, 2016’s “Zootopia,” will soon get its own land in a Disney park. Just don’t count on it coming to Walt Disney World anytime soon.

The new “Zootopia” land will be built in Shanghai Disneyland, marking the park’s second major expansion since opening in 2016.

“Guests will be invited to experience the mammalian metropolis of Zootopia ‘where anyone can be anything,’ with a new major attraction that will seamlessly blend Disney storytelling and state-of-the-art technology to bring this fan-favorite movie and its characters to life – including Judy Hopps and Nick Wilde,” Disney Parks editorial content director Thomas Smith wrote in a Jan. 22 blog post announcing the project.

Bringing the film to the Chinese park makes sense for a variety of reasons. “Zootopia” earned more than $235 million at the box office in the country and is the highest-grossing animated film in Chinese history. Utilizing a more recent intellectual property helps overcome lower awareness of the Disney brand in the Chinese market, where guests didn’t grow up with Mickey, Minnie, Donald and Goofy like Americans.

“Zootopia” was also successful in the U.S., fueling a persistent rumor that it will be coming to Disney’s Animal Kingdom.

Sites like WDW News Today speculated before the 2017 D23 Expo that it would take the place of Rafiki’s Planet Watch, transforming the Wildlife Express into the commuter train Judy Hopps rides in the film. No such plans have been announced and Rafiki’s Planet Watch is being refurbished, not closing down.

A re-theming of that area with “Zootopia” characters spreading a pro-conservation message may have worked, according to Bill Zanetti, founding member of the Entertainment Management Advisory Board at the University of Central Florida. But he feels a full-fledged “Zootopia” land wouldn’t fit into Animal Kingdom.

“If you think that ‘Zootopia’ belongs in Disney’s Animal Kingdom, then you either don’t understand what Animal Kingdom is, or you don’t understand what ‘Zootopia’ is,” he told Orlando Rising. “’Zootopia’ is a movie about people that just happen to be anthropomorphic. This has no place in Disney’s Animal Kingdom, which is a park about man’s relationship with nature — a relationship where, at the end of the day, nature always triumphs.”

The intellectual property that has been added to Animal Kingdom in recent years fits that theme, Zanetti said. Pandora: The World of Avatar centers around the relationship with nature and the film’s themes of conservation and balance. Similarly, he feels the addition of Pixar’s “Up” characters to the park’s bird-focused stage show works because it pushes a message of exploration.

Disney park purists may scoff at the idea that the Bob Iger-led Walt Disney Company cares about such thematic consistencies. Epcot, once devoid of characters from Disney films and TV shows, has a Norway-themed pavilion hosting a “Frozen” boat ride taking place in a fictional country.

But Animal Kingdom is different, Zanetti said, largely because of Disney Imagineer Joe Rohde.

“He’s the lead designer for the park and he is sort of a caretaker for the park as the principal creative head for Disney’s Animal Kingdom,” Zanetti said. “It isn’t just Joe though, there are tons of other people at Disney that really see Animal Kingdom as something more special. As long as that passion is there, Animal Kingdom will stay true to its message.”

Animal Kingdom hasn’t seen a major addition since Pandora opened in May 2017 and no major new rides are set to open before Disney World’s 50th anniversary in 2021.

It may not need anything else to continue drawing guests. In 2017, the park’s attendance rose by 15 percent, becoming the second most-visited Disney World park — and that was with Pandora being open only part of the year.

Photo credit: Disney