Ever watch a Disney movie and feel slightly disappointed that you’ll never be able to visit those wondrous, fantastical places? Good news: The castles, towns, geological formations, and even buildings in many Disney movies were inspired by real-life locations. So the next time you’re feeling a little sad that you’ll never get to visit Snow White’s cottage or the Beast’s magic castle, buy yourself a plane ticket and get going. (Mining dwarfs and enchanted flatware not guaranteed.)

Places You Can Visit

1. The real place: Angel Falls in Venezuela

The Disney place: Paradise Falls in Up

Britannica/Disney

To find their inspiration for Carl and Ellie Frederickson’s dream adventure, director Pete Docter and nine of his Pixar cohorts trekked through the South American jungle. Among the inspiring landscape was Angel Falls, the world’s highest uninterrupted waterfall, which became Paradise Falls for the movie.

2. The real place: U-Drop Inn in Shamrock, Texas

The Disney place: Ramone's Body Shop in Cars





NPS/Disney

Many of the places and attractions in Cars were directly inspired by a Route 66 road trip John Lasseter took with his wife and kids. Ramone’s Body Shop, for example, is a near-exact replica of the U-Drop Inn, an historic art deco gas station and restaurant built in 1936 in Shamrock, Texas.

3. The real place: Mont Saint-Michel in Normandy, France

The Disney place: The castle in Tangled





Wikimedia Commons/Disney

The palace where Rapunzel was stolen from her parents was inspired by the styles of many castles, but one thing was certain from the very beginning: It had to be situated on an island like Mont Saint-Michel in Normandy, France.

4. The real place: Chateau du Chambord, France

The Disney place: The Beast's castle in Beauty and the Beast





Chambord.org/Disney

Creating the Beast and his environment was proving to be a bit challenging for animator Glen Keane—but then he and his crew visited the Chateau of Chambord. “It was an ominous, impressive place with all of these spires and just standing there before us," he said. "I mean I’ll never forget the morning driving up there through the mist and fog and seeing it there. I thought, 'This is the Beast’s castle. This is where he lives.'"

5. The real place: Neuschwanstein Castle, Germany

The Disney place: Sleeping Beauty castle, Disneyland

Neuschwanstein.org/Disneyland

When Walt and Lillian Disney took a little European vacation prior to the construction of their theme parks, one of their stops was Neuschwanstein, a 19th-century Bavarian castle commissioned by King Ludwig II in 1869. When the Disneys came back to California, they used elements of the fairy tale-like architecture in Sleeping Beauty Castle, Disneyland’s centerpiece.

6. The real place: Cadillac Ranch in Amarillo, Texas

The Disney place: Cadillac Range in Cars

Artificial Owl/Disney

Just like Ramone’s Body Shop, Cadillac Range, the geological formation near Cars' Radiator Springs, was inspired by a famous Route 66 attraction. The “Cadillac Ranch” near Amarillo, Texas, was created in 1974 as an art installation.

7. The real place: Hotel de Glace in Quebec City

The Disney place: Elsa's ice castle in Frozen

Hotel de Glace/Disney

You probably thought Elsa’s icy powers were just fiction, but the creators of this ice hotel in Quebec City know otherwise. Director Chris Buck stayed at the Hotel de Glace to do research about five years before Frozen was released, studying ice structures and snow construction.

8. The real place: Storybook cottages in the Los Feliz neighborhood of L.A.

The Disney place: The Seven Dwarfs' cottage in Snow White

California Home Design/Disney

Many people think these Loz Feliz cottages were inspired by Snow White, but it’s actually the other way around. The cottages were designed and built by architect Ben Sherwood in 1931, and Snow White wasn’t released until 1937. At least one of the animators who worked heavily on the movie lived here while he worked on the film.

The One You Can't Visit

Disney

Despite a long-persisting rumor (and many, many Internet articles), The Lion King’s Pride Rock is not based on a real-life counterpart in Hell’s Gate National Park in Kenya. “We took a trip to Kenya to research the animals and the landscape for the movie,” co-director Roger Allers has admitted. “There are certain things lifted from the landscape, but we used a variety of inspirations. Many people try to say, 'Pride Rock is based on this mountain here,' but they are wrong. An artist in Burbank invented Pride Rock."