Boston Herald

How Legoland Florida’s accommodat­ions stack up

- By ROB OWEN

TRAVEL

WINTER HAVEN, Fla. — When Legoland Florida opened on the former site of Cypress Gardens in 2011 it didn’t have a hotel. Now it has two.

The Legoland Hotel opened in 2015, and new for this summer there’s Legoland Beach Retreat.

Which is the better choice? It depends on what you’re willing to spend (Legoland Hotel is more expensive and located at the theme park entrance) and how much convenienc­e you’re willing to sacrifice (the less expensive Legoland Beach Retreat is located a short drive from the theme park behind the husk of an abandoned Kmart store).

Staying at either location includes a free buffet breakfast — the buffet at Legoland Hotel had more options — and both hotels have pools, but Beach Retreat’s pool appeared to be larger, with more oversize Lego bricks floating in the water for children to build with.

Legoland Hotel

A raucous, for-kids atmosphere courses through the lobby of the Legoland Hotel, especially at 8 p.m., when it’s time for the nightly pajama party that winds kids up just before bedtime.

But it’s a pretty sweet location for Lego-obsessed kids any time of day thanks to giant pits filled with Legos in several lobby locations that are available for free-building. Lego characters also show up from time to time, to meet and greet guests.

Hotel guests get the opportunit­y to sign up for a Master Model Builder Workshop (spots in the class are limited; first come, first served) where a Legoland employee walks students through building a small Lego creation they get to keep (on our visit, everyone built a small Lego race car).

The elevator turns into a party zone, too, with a disco ball, light projection­s and music that activates as the elevator makes its journey to and from guest room floors.

Each room in the hotel has one of four themes — pirate, kingdom (knights), adventure (Egyptian archaeolog­y) and friends (purple and pink predominat­e) — and each room is decked out in style to match that theme, including Lego creations that decorate the walls.

Our kingdom room had a crown-wearing rat, snail, frog, butterfly and ladybug made out of Lego bricks

adorning walls wallpapere­d to resemble the interior of a stone castle.

Each room also includes a treasure hunt with a small bag of Lego toys at its conclusion inside a safe. Our kids loved the treasure hunt.

Legoland Beach Retreat

A quieter setting on the shore of Lake Dexter — fencing between the resort and lake is in place to keep alligators out, but alligator warning signs are also present — the Beach Retreat is made up of about a dozen coves, each with four-toeight duplex bungalows surroundin­g a small playground at the cove’s center.

The rooms at Beach Retreat seem smaller and cheaper — more wallpapere­d images of Lego Minifigs, fewer actual Lego creations decorating the walls. And although each bungalow has its own porch with a table and four chairs, there was nowhere inside the room to sit other than the beds.

The playground­s in each cove are pretty small — so small our kids, 3 and 7, had no real interest in them — and there’s little shade to be found from the hot Florida sun. We counted just four sun umbrellas at the pool.

Fewer scheduled activities, no character interactio­ns or access to Master Model Builder classes and no in-room treasure hunts are a few of the Legoland Hotel amenities that Legoland Beach Retreat lacked during our visit.

A shuttle is available to take Beach Retreat guests to Legoland theme park, but it doesn’t run between noon and 3 p.m., which makes driving to the park a necessity for anyone traveling with little ones who need to come back for an early afternoon nap. (Parking at Legoland is free for Beach Retreat guests.)

On the plus side, there’s a large playground near the pool, along with sand volleyball and other games. The cul-de-sac concept might make Beach Retreat ideal for a group rental of several bungalows for, say, a family reunion.

And while Beach Retreat is located behind a strip mall, once you’re inside, it feels like its own world, just one with the benefit of walking distance proximity to a Publix grocery store.

If you go ...

• WHERE: Winter Haven, Fla., about an hour southwest of Orlando Internatio­nal Airport by car with the usual traffic. Add another 30 to 60 minutes at rush hour.

• TICKET S: One-day tickets to Legoland Florida purchased online in advance begin at $73; tickets for the theme park and attached water park start at $93 when bought online in advance. Two-day tickets for both parks start at $113. Parking costs $17 at the gate (free if staying in a Legoland hotel) or $15 purchased in advance online.

• CO ST: Prices vary quite a bit depending on the time of year and day of the week booked but generally the Beach Retreat is less expensive. Last month, a search for a room the night of June 23 found a rate of $455 at Legoland Hotel and $285 at Beach Retreat. A room on Sept. 8 was $285 at Legoland Hotel and $175 at Beach Retreat.

Room and ticket packages, including the offer of a second day free, are available at legoland.com/ florida. • HOW MANY D AYS? How much time to spend at any theme park always boils down to this question: Are you a completist who wants to ride everything, or are you satisfied with the highlights? Legoland can pretty easily be done in one day — visit the new Ninjago ride first as it can have a long wait — but if you want to visit the Legoland Water Park, too, then two days is advisable for a more leisurely experience. And the cost for the second-day ticket is relatively negligible.

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