Bob Iger shared a familiar kind of image this weekend. In a brief Instagram post, The Walt Disney Company CEO shared two photos of himself walking a stretch of coastline along Yas Island in the United Arab Emirates:
“Walking the site of what will one day be Disneyland Abu Dhabi! Lots of work ahead, but all very exciting!”


For Disney fans, there’s a certain history baked into photos like this. Walt Disney famously wandered the orange groves of early Disneyland during construction (as featured on the recent Disneyland Handcrafted film poster), and later explored undeveloped land in Central Florida while planning what would become Walt Disney World.


Those images have since become part of Disney lore. Seeing Iger on foot at a future park site naturally invites comparisons, even if the context is very different.
Disneyland Abu Dhabi is still in its earliest stages. Disney has confirmed the park is targeting an opening in the early 2030s, but details are limited besides the initial concept art and plans. Disney will not own or operate the resort. A local partner, Miral, will finance and operate the park, while Disney provides creative oversight and collects licensing fees (similar to Tokyo Disney Resort with Oriental Land Company).

While money is an obvious factor, it’s not the only reason Abu Dhabi makes sense to Disney. The region sits within a long flight of Europe, Asia, and Africa, placing a Disney park within reach of markets that have never had easy access to one. Abu Dhabi has also spent years heavily investing in tourism projects. From Disney’s perspective, that infrastructure and government support reduce risk compared to building from scratch elsewhere.
Still, the project raises harder questions that won’t go away. Disney has spent years publicly aligning itself with inclusion and representation. Building a family theme park in a country where LGBTQ+ guests face serious legal and cultural barriers is a real contradiction. That tension exists regardless of whether Disney is directly operating the park.

— Disneyland Pride Nite
Iger’s walk across that coastline may echo images from Disney’s past, but it also highlights how different the company’s future looks. What Disneyland Abu Dhabi ultimately becomes, and how Disney reconciles its values, will unfold over the next decade.



