Hey Disney Vacationers! If you’ve ever toured Disney’s Animal Kingdom with kids, you already know that sometimes the most important “attraction” isn’t a ride at all — it’s a place where your kids can simply run around and burn off energy while you sit down for a few minutes and breathe.
That’s why a small detail buried inside a new Disney permit filing actually caught my attention more than most ride rumors lately. Disney recently filed plans with the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, and inside those documents is something we haven’t seen before: the first clear look at the Tropical Americas Playground site layout.
At first glance, it might sound minor. A playground doesn’t exactly scream headline news. But if you’ve ever tried to make it through a full Animal Kingdom day with little ones, you know how valuable these spaces really are. They can be the difference between a smooth afternoon and a full meltdown.
And based on what this permit shows, Disney isn’t just adding a small play corner. They’re building something that looks like a real replacement for The Boneyard.
Quick Summary
If you just want the highlights before we dive deeper, here’s what we know so far:
- Disney filed permits that reveal the Tropical Americas Playground site layout
- The playground will sit on the former Cretaceous Trail
- It will be located between Dinosaur (future Indiana Jones) and the former Chester & Hester’s store
- Plans show slides, climbing structures, and themed play areas
- The size appears similar to the former Boneyard playground
- It will serve as a dedicated kid-friendly break spot inside the new land
- Tropical Americas is expected to open in phases, likely starting around 2027
Now let’s walk through what all of that actually means for your day in the park.
What the permit actually reveals
The permit is tied to wastewater infrastructure for the upcoming Tropical Americas land, which is replacing DinoLand U.S.A. These types of filings usually include site maps that show exactly where new facilities will sit. In this case, the drawings clearly outline the footprint and placement of a dedicated playground space inside the land.
When Disney files permits at this stage, it usually means construction planning is well underway. So this isn’t early concept art or speculation. This is the practical, behind-the-scenes work that happens right before building starts.
In other words, this playground is happening.
Where the new playground will be located
The playground will sit on the former Cretaceous Trail, tucked between DINOSAUR, which is being transformed into the new Indiana Jones attraction, and the old Chester and Hester’s store that’s being converted into Tropical Americas retail.
If you know that area of the park, you know it’s basically the center of everything. That placement feels very intentional. Instead of forcing families to walk out of the land to find a rest area, Disney is putting a kid-friendly space right between major attractions. You’ll likely be able to hop off a ride, let the kids play for twenty or thirty minutes, and then move right back into the next experience without crisscrossing the park.
From a parent’s perspective, that’s incredibly convenient.
What the Tropical Americas Playground site layout includes
Based on the plans, this isn’t a token playground with one slide and a bench. The layout shows multiple slides, climbing structures, and themed play areas built directly into the Tropical Americas environment. Think something immersive and story-driven rather than a generic plastic playground.
The overall size looks very similar to The Boneyard that operated in DinoLand for years, which is honestly the best-case scenario.
If you’ve used The Boneyard before, you know it wasn’t just something kids ran through for five minutes. It was a full-on break spot. My family would easily spend half an hour there while the kids climbed everything in sight and the adults grabbed a drink and sat in the shade. It reset the entire day.
Seeing a footprint that size again tells me Disney understands how important that kind of space is.
How this fits into the bigger Tropical Americas project
Of course, this playground is just one piece of a much larger transformation.
Tropical Americas is replacing DinoLand U.S.A. completely. Dinosaur is becoming an Indiana Jones ride. An Encanto attraction is on the way. Retail and dining are being reimagined. The entire area is getting a new Central and South American theme and story.
Right now, the whole section of the park is closed off, which actually helps construction move faster since there aren’t guests walking through the area every day. Historically, when Disney clears out an entire land like this, progress speeds up pretty quickly.
We’re still waiting on an official timeline, but many people expect a phased opening. Smaller experiences like the playground and carousel could open first, with the larger rides following later. Based on current closures and permit activity, a 2027 or early 2028 timeframe feels realistic.
Nothing confirmed yet — just reading the pattern Disney usually follows.
Why this matters more than you might think
I’ll be honest: when Disney announces new rides, that’s exciting. But when you’re actually in the park, sometimes the most helpful additions are the simple ones.
Animal Kingdom gets hot. The paths are long. Wait times stack up. Kids get tired fast.
Having a dedicated place where they can run, climb, and play while you slow down for a few minutes makes the whole day easier. It keeps everyone happier and helps you stay in the park longer without feeling worn out.
That’s exactly what The Boneyard used to do for us, and this new playground looks like it’s stepping right into that role.
My thoughts
Personally, I’m really glad Disney didn’t skip this. It would have been easy to fill Tropical Americas with rides and shops and forget about the practical needs of families. Instead, they carved out space specifically for kids to just be kids.
To me, that shows thoughtful design.
Because sometimes the most valuable thing in a theme park isn’t another attraction. It’s a place to take a breather.
Final take
The Tropical Americas Playground site layout gives us our first concrete look at how Disney plans to keep Animal Kingdom family-friendly as this new land takes shape. It appears to be a full-sized, Boneyard-style play space in a smart central location, and that’s something many families will quietly appreciate more than any headline ride.
It may not be the flashiest update, but it’s the kind of addition that can genuinely make your park day smoother.
And honestly, those are the changes I care about most.
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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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