
Magic Kingdom has filed a new permit for the Tomorrowland Bridge, and the contractor name attached to it is turning some heads. D.H. Griffin Wrecking Company is listed as the contractor on a Notice of Commencement permit filed for the bridge. The permit scope is listed as general construction, but D.H. Griffin is a specialist in demolition, environmental remediation, infrastructure, and industrial contracting — which suggests this may not be a routine maintenance job.
Before anyone spirals about the Tomorrowland Bridge disappearing, a full demolition and rebuild appears unlikely based on the permit language. The more plausible read here is structural or specialized repair work on the existing bridge. The timing also makes a lot of sense when you look at what is happening around it right now.
Quick Summary
- Magic Kingdom filed a Notice of Commencement permit for the Tomorrowland Bridge, with D.H. Griffin Wrecking Company as the contractor
- D.H. Griffin specializes in demolition, environmental remediation, infrastructure, and industrial contracting
- Permit scope is listed as general construction — full demolition seems unlikely; structural repair work is the more probable interpretation
- The castle moat is currently drained for the ongoing Cinderella Castle repaint, giving crews easier access to bridge infrastructure
- No word yet on how long the work will take or whether guest access will be affected
Why D.H. Griffin and Why Now?
D.H. Griffin is not the kind of contractor you hire for a fresh coat of paint. The company operates in demolition, structural work, environmental remediation, and industrial infrastructure — the kind of specialized work that goes beyond what a standard maintenance crew handles. The presence of their name on this permit is what makes it interesting, even if the scope language is vague.
The timing is the other telling detail. Cinderella Castle is currently undergoing a repaint, and the moat surrounding it has been drained to support that work. With water out of the moat, crews have direct access to bridge infrastructure that would normally sit above water — footings, supports, structural elements underneath the bridge surface. It is a window of opportunity that makes perfect sense to use for any work that requires access from below.
What Does This Mean for Guests?
Right now, there is no information on how long the bridge work will take or whether it will affect guest access during construction. The Tomorrowland Bridge connects the hub to Tomorrowland over the castle moat — if it were to close, guests would need to enter Tomorrowland via Fantasyland or the alternate path through the interior of the land. Disney has managed similar situations before without major disruption, but the full impact depends on the scope and duration of the work.
This is a developing story. As more permit details or visible construction activity emerge, the picture will get clearer. For now, if you are planning a Magic Kingdom trip, this is worth keeping on your radar — especially if you are traveling in the coming weeks while the moat is still drained and work may be getting underway.
Wrapping Up
The Tomorrowland Bridge permit with D.H. Griffin is a meaningful data point in Magic Kingdom’s ongoing construction activity. It fits neatly into the current window created by the castle moat drain, and the contractor choice signals something more technical than a standard fix. Stay tuned for updates as the work progresses — this one is worth watching.
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Meet the Author: Nate Bishop
I’m a die-hard Disney fan with 38 years of visits under my belt, having stepped into Disney World 120+ times. Proud to be a Disney Annual Passholder, a Vacation Club member since ’92, a Castaway Club Member, and a runDisney enthusiast. Oh, and I’ve graduated from the Disney College of Knowledge. Need Disney insights or planning tips? I’m your guy!
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