Posts

The Horror! The Queue! (part two)

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It is with great pleasure, and after a great deal of tedium that I can finally say, I've finished the rough blocking in of the entire non-showroom area of the ride. As you can see, I not only finished the geometry of the queue area, but also the fastpass garden. Obviously, there is still much to do in terms of adding details like foliage, brick patterns, railing patterns and widths, some permanent, and semi-permanent fixtures, etc. Now, I have the finished geometry to put it in.  And about that fastpass garden.  As far as I could find, there are no plans online of the area, leaving me with no choice but to gather photos (more photos than I'd gathered for the entire rest of the ride so far) open google earth, search youtube, and begin the tedious process of finding any measurement I could. Even after all that, there were only a few measurements I was able to find by counting bricks, the result is a little game of parametric-tango I've been playing since the last post. You se...

The Horror! The Queue! (part one)

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Over the past few days, I've moved on from the entrance of the queue, to the first part of it. Long story short, this broke me as a person.  Drawing anything is relatively easy if you're given the right dimensions. Of course, this is a luxury I went without. I had only the plans of the main building, and the widths of two pathways to work with, in terms of concrete measurements. Aside from that, I used aerial imagery, google image spheres, normal images, and gut feelings to draw this out as accurately as I could. Honestly, I'm pretty happy with the result.

The Queue Entrance

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With some luck, I'll get better at naming these posts, but for now, I'm going with what I've got. As you can tell from this plan: There's work to be done on the south-east-east side. I have two plans that I'm using for reference This plan was stitched together from plans I found on Haunted Portraits , and Long-Forgotten Haunted Mansion. from Long-Forgotten Haunted Mansion The problem with these is, none are as-built. I've guessed that the location of the entrance gate is accurate between all of them, though. As I can't find a clear indication as to the exact dimension to the location of the gate, I'm using the grid, shown in the second picture. I'm pretty sure the distance between grid lines is 5'. Also, we know where the entrance is, relative to this grid. At this point, I'm also looking at a photo, to see what the actual geometry looks like. Knowing all this, I feel like I can make a pretty reasonable guess if I eyeball it. Obviously, this ...

From Paper to Processor

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Glad to see I haven't lost you, so soon . Anyhow, it's time I explain myself. My goal is to recreate the entirety  of the Haunted Mansion in Disneyland, Anaheim California, in CAD. Briefly, for those as of yet unfamiliar, CAD, or Computer-Aided Design is the video game I like to play with when I'm bored, but besides that, CAD is a term used to describe the variety of programs used by industry professionals to design houses, new products, personal projects, etc. In my specific case, the CAD programs in question are currently Revit, Autocad, and Rhino. Each of these has its own specific toolset that makes it better geared towards one type of design than the other.  So what's with the title? Well, one summer in middle school, I came across a little site called  Haunted Dimensions , and decided I'd try my hand in building my own miniature mansion. It went about as well as could be expected, considering I'd never done anything like it before. It's crooked in more...

Welcome, welcome, well, come in!

     Hello to all of you, and welcome to yet another  Haunted Mansion blog. Yes, there are many like it, but this one is mine. Given that, so far, that is the only distinction between this blog and others, let me take a moment to introduce myself.      I'm Sam Liedtke, I was born approximately 21 years ago somewhere in the Salt Lake City metropolitan area. A handful of things have happened in the time between then and now, but I consider the most important of them to be my introduction to the Disney parks, and of course, with them, The Haunted Mansion. For the most recent half of my life, I've decided to devote my life to becoming an Imagineer. As of the time of this post, I attend classes at the University of Utah, majoring in Architecture.      As I'm sure you can imagine, there's quite a bit more to know about me, and my parasocial relationship with The Haunted Mansion, but if I worried about piecing together a proper introduction, I'...