trains parked inside Contemporary during
Hurricane Ian, 2022 Disney's Contemporary Resort is one of two resorts located on property when Walt Disney World opened in 1971. The tower at Contemporary, the most prominent of the resort's three stand-alone buildings, was built as an
A-frame with outer walls which slope inwards around an inner atrium. This design was a collaboration by Disney, the
United States Steel Corporation, and
Xerox Tower architect
Welton Becket. To construct the building, steel frames were erected on-site and modular pre-constructed rooms, designed by California architect
Donald Wexler, were lifted into place by crane. The original buildings at
Disney's Polynesian Village Resort, the
Court of Flags Resort and one residential property at Bay Hill (using the first four units off the assembly lines) were all built the same way, except these rooms were stacked instead of slid in. In 2006, Disney filed plans for a project on the site of Contemporary's North Garden Wing. Bay Lake Tower ultimately contained 281
timeshare units. In preparation for the future sale, Disney incorporated a condominium association for the property on January 9, 2007, that would manage the units. The project was officially unveiled on September 16, 2008. Timeshares began on September 28, 2008, to existing Disney Vacation Club members and on October 5, 2008, for new members. In 2005, Disney began an extensive renovation of Contemporary, and it was completed in 2009. As part of the construction, the North Garden Wing of the hotel was demolished to make way for a separate Disney Vacation Club resort that opened in 2009. At the same time,
Bay Lake Tower began construction. Disney's Racquet Club was demolished by January 30, 2007, while the North Wing itself was demolished between January 31 and April 6, 2007. Construction on the new building continued through 2007, without Disney announcing what was actually being built. Bay Lake Tower opened in 2009.
Richard Nixon's 1973 press conference On November 17, 1973, Contemporary was the site of what would become one of the most famous press conference statements in modern American politics, where President
Richard Nixon declared, "I am not a crook." Nixon, whose job approval rating had been declining steadily for over a year due to the on-going
Watergate scandal, made the statement during an appearance at the
Associated Press Managing Editors Association annual convention, at which he held a live one-hour televised press conference. Following an earlier question on Nixon's taxes, Nixon addressed claims that he profited from his public service, stating "I've earned every cent. And in all of my years of public life I have never obstructed justice ... People have got to know whether or not their President is a crook. Well, I'm not a crook. I've earned everything I've got." Less than one year later, facing almost certain
impeachment and removal from office, Nixon announced his resignation in a national speech on August 8, 1974, which became effective the following day. ==Layout==