The new Disney Vacation Club time-share tower expected to open in 2023 will boast a Mickey-shaped spa, outdoor pool bar and multi-level grand villas with expansive balconies overlooking the Disneyland Hotel property.

A final site plan and conditional use permit application for a proposed Disney Vacation Club project next to the Disneyland Hotel was filed with the city of Anaheim, Disney officials said.

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Disney has set a 2023 proposed opening date for the 12-story Disney Vacation Club tower. The proposal for the new property is still in the early planning stages and details could change. The proposed 280,000-square-foot DVC time-share tower would be built on approximately 2 acres next to the Disneyland Hotel. The project would include 307 on-site parking spaces within an existing lot.

The 350 Disney Vacation Club rooms would include 271 larger studios, 38 smaller two-person studios, 20 two-bedroom suites, 19 one-bedroom suites and two Grand Villas.

The smaller two-person studios are expected to be similar to the two-person tower studios at the new Riviera Resort DVC property at Walt Disney World in Florida. The Riviera’s 255-square-foot tower studios have a queen-sized bed housed in a wall unit, full-size bathroom, sofa, desk and balcony. The Riviera’s sprawling and luxurious Grand Villa suites each sleep 12 people.

Besides a small outdoor pool bar, the new Disneyland project would add no new food, retail, meeting or banquet facilities. A Mickey-shaped spa would be part of a new pool amenity area. DVC guests would use Disneyland Hotel services for arrivals, valet parking and check-ins.

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An artist concept rendering of the proposed project shows a Disney Vacation Club tower designed to compliment the look of the 1955 Disneyland Hotel.

A two-story open-air ground floor would allow DVC guests to pass through to both sides of the building. Lounge chairs would surround pools on either side of the Disney Vacation Club tower.

Multi-colored panels would stretch the height of the Disney Vacation Club tower on the end of the building with the multi-level grand villas. A crackled cream pattern would wrap around the other end of the mostly glass building. Balconies would offer views for rooms at both ends of the building.

The proposed Disney Vacation Club project has yet to go before the city of Anaheim for approval and may not be built, Disney officials said.

Disneyland previously submitted an application in November to the city of Anaheim for a conceptual development review of the proposed Disney Vacation Club tower.

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The Disney Vacation Club tower project area is located on a grassy area between Walnut Street and the Disneyland Hotel’s Frontier Tower, swimming pool and convention center. Construction would remove an existing laundry facility.

The DVC applications submitted to the city of Anaheim are the first in a series of filings and approvals Disney will submit and seek with the project. Construction is estimated to take 3 to 4 years, which could push back the proposed 2023 opening date.

The vacation ownership project would increase Disneyland’s time-share capacity nearly six-fold — adding to the 71 Disney Vacation Club rooms at Disney’s Grand Californian Hotel & Spa.

Disney says the proposed DVC resort would create 550 construction jobs and 100 time-share operations job if the project is approved.

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Disney canceled construction of a planned 2021 Downtown Disney hotel after Anaheim eliminated a tax rebate agreement worth $267 million to the company. Hotel construction had been set to begin on a 17-acre parcel between the original Disneyland Hotel and the Downtown Disney Monorail station when Disney canceled the expansion plans in October 2018.

Disney officials said the proposed Disney Vacation Club and the former hotel proposal are two completely different projects.

Disney will not be seeking a tax incentive from the city of Anaheim for the Disney Vacation Club project, officials said. The Disney Vacation Club rooms would generate a city bed tax similar to hotels that would be calculated using a slightly different formula — accounting for club members using points rather than dollars to book their rooms.

The Disney Vacation Club debuted in 1991 as a flexible points-based membership system rather than the traditional fixed-week time-share model. The club’s 220,000 members have access to 15 DVC resorts around the globe.

A new Disney Vacation Club resort is planned near Florida’s Magic Kingdom theme park at Walt Disney World in 2022. The proposed 2023 Disneyland project would be Disney’s 17th DVC resort.