The drained moat around Cinderella Castle at Magic Kingdom is giving guests an unexpected history lesson in 2026. With the water drained for the ongoing castle painting project, what were metal tracks, and are now cement strips visible along the moat floor. They are not construction equipment. They are remnants of the Plaza Swan Boats, a scenic boat ride that carried guests through Magic Kingdom’s hub waterways from the park’s earliest years until August 1983.

What Were the Plaza Swan Boats?
The Plaza Swan Boats were one of Magic Kingdom’s original scenic attractions, operating throughout the 1970s and into the early 1980s. Guests boarded near the hub by Tomorrowland and cruised through the park’s waterway on a Freindship type boat with a large intricately carved wood Swan gracing the front. The route passed views of Main Street landmarks, including the Penny Arcade, Casey’s Corner, and The Plaza Restaurant, before moving toward Adventureland, passing beneath the Cinderella Castle drawbridge area, and returning to the unloading station.
It was not a thrill ride. It was a slow, sightseeing experience that reflected a version of Magic Kingdom where simply drifting through a beautiful environment counted as an attraction worth building. A 1974 Magic Kingdom park map documents the full route, including the load and unload station and illustrations of the boats moving through the hub waterways.



Why the Tracks Are Visible Now
Disney announced the Cinderella Castle makeover in December 2025, with work beginning in January 2026. Draining the moat gave crews access to the base of the castle for the repaint. It also gave everyone else a clear view of the moat floor for the first time since 2021.
The tracks visible there are tied to the Swan Boats’ guidance system. The ride originally launched with an electronic guidance system that did not perform as intended. After a brief refurbishment, the boats were retrofitted with water-jet propulsion and manual steering. The tracks left in the moat are part of that operational infrastructure, sitting undisturbed since the attraction closed more than 40 years ago.
For most guests walking through Magic Kingdom today, those tracks have no context. There is no signage, no reference in the park, and no obvious reason to know a ride ever operated in that waterway. So when the water went down, and the tracks came up, the questions online were immediate.

Why the Ride Closed
The Plaza Swan Boats closed in August 1983 after running on a seasonal schedule for several years. The ride was expensive to maintain, had ongoing navigation challenges, and could not move enough guests to make the operational cost worthwhile. As Magic Kingdom expanded and prime real estate inside the park became more competitive, a low-capacity scenic cruise with recurring mechanical issues became harder to keep on the schedule.

The Dock Outlasted the Ride by Decades
One of the more interesting footnotes in the Swan Boats story is how long the loading platform remained visible after the attraction itself was gone. The dock stayed in Magic Kingdom for decades and was repurposed over time for small displays, photo opportunities, and some character-related uses. It was not removed until the Magic Kingdom Hub expansion in 2014, meaning guests who visited any time between 1983 and 2014 would have seen the structure without knowing what it was originally built for.

Sam’s Disney Diary Take
This is a great example of how current work at Magic Kingdom can uncover old stories that have been hiding in plain sight. The drained moat is not just revealing access to construction. It reveals a forgotten attraction that once circled the park’s heart. When guests ask what those tracks are, the answer is simple: they are remnants of the Plaza Swan Boats, one of Magic Kingdom’s most overlooked pieces of history.
A special thanks to Sam at Sam’s Disney Diary for the research and perspective behind this one. Sam’s Disney Diary YouTube Channel is a rabbit hole of information where you watch the history of Disney!
What Are Those Tracks in Cinderella Castle’s Moat? The Answer Is a Lost Magic Kingdom Ride
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