The Walt Disney World version of the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction would be housed in a Spanish fortress, much like the show. Originally, the building was known as El Castillo (The Castle), an ancient Spanish citadel. Guarded by the Caribbean watchtower Torre del Sol, the attraction is housed in a golden Spanish fort called Castillo Del Morro, inspired by Castillo de San Felipe del Morro, a 16th-century citadel located in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
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| - The Walt Disney World version of the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction would be housed in a Spanish fortress, much like the show. Originally, the building was known as El Castillo (The Castle), an ancient Spanish citadel. Guarded by the Caribbean watchtower Torre del Sol, the attraction is housed in a golden Spanish fort called Castillo Del Morro, inspired by Castillo de San Felipe del Morro, a 16th-century citadel located in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
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| - The Walt Disney World version of the Pirates of the Caribbean attraction would be housed in a Spanish fortress, much like the show. Originally, the building was known as El Castillo (The Castle), an ancient Spanish citadel. Guarded by the Caribbean watchtower Torre del Sol, the attraction is housed in a golden Spanish fort called Castillo Del Morro, inspired by Castillo de San Felipe del Morro, a 16th-century citadel located in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Once inside El Castillo, guests would pass through a dimly lit labyrinth of arsenals and dungeons that serve as the attraction's interior queue. After the Walt Disney World show, guests emerge from the subterranean passageways of El Castillo on the shores of Pirate's Bay and make their way along a rocky beachfront that
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