7007 Sea World Dr
Orlando, FL 32821
(888) 800-5447
Although located just one mile south of SeaWorld off International Drive, the restaurant is off the beaten path—nestled away inside the sanctuary of Marriott’s Grande Vista Resort. The circular dining room, overlooking the golf course, provides an intimate ambiance that local residents and visitors to Orlando often seek. The exquisite menu boasts a selection of entrees for all tastes —including a variety of children’s favorites. MARRIOTT VACATION CLUB POSTING POLICY This is your Fan Page and we encourage you to share, like and comment on our posts. Please bear in mind that this is a public and professional platform. We’ll do our best to ensure that our postings on this page comply with our standards, which prohibit content that: • is abusive, defamatory, threatening or obscene • is fraudulent, deceptive or misleading • violates the copyright, trademark, patent, trade secret, right of privacy, right of publicity or other intellectual property right of another • contains links or advertisements for an organization or company without the explicit written consent from Marriott Vacation Club prior to the post • contains an offer not sponsored by Marriott Vacation Club to purchase, sell, exchange or rent a Marriott Vacation Club timeshare interest or a timeshare interest or service from any other company. • is not related to the topic posted • contains or links to any virus, worm, Trojan horse, or other form of malware or harmful code • contains the personal information of others, such as names, addresses and telephone numbers • violates any law or regulation • is otherwise offensive We expect users not to post content that violates our standards. We cannot monitor postings or discussions in advance, but we reserve the right to remove any posting that does not meet our standards. Marriott Vacation Club also reserves the right to ban a user from posting Please understand that comments posted to this Page do not represent the opinions of Marriott Vacation Club. MARRIOTT VACATION CLUB ASSOCIATES: This page is not a replacement or alternative channel for associates to raise employment or business issues. This policy should not be interpreted and is not intended to be applied in a way that would interfere with the rights of associates to self-organize, form, join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively through representation of their own choosing, or to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection, or to refrain from engaging in such activities. Associates should continue to inform their manager or Human Resources representative of employment or business issues. Associates should also be familiar with and utilize the Guarantee of Fair Treatment process, or, when there are ethical concerns, call the Marriott Vacation Club Business Integrity Line to report the issues or concerns.
Mako is a steel hypercoaster at SeaWorld in Orlando, Florida. Touted as the tallest, longest and fastest roller coaster in the Orlando theme-park market, Mako opened on June 10, 2016 to rave reviews from many guests.HistoryIn April 2015, SeaWorld officials began teasing the upcoming announcement of a new thrill ride for their flagship park in Orlando, Florida. At the time, the only detail revealed was that the roller coaster would be 200 feet in height and would become the longest, tallest and fastest roller coaster in the city. On May 27, 2015, SeaWorld officially announced the construction of Mako, which is named after the mako shark, considered the fastest species of shark in the oceans.Mako became the anchor attraction to a new park area themed to sharks in general, and is located adjacent to SeaWorld's previously existing shark attractions, such as the Shark Encounter aquarium and its attached "Sharks Underwater Grill" restaurant. It is the first new attraction added to SeaWorld Orlando since "Antarctica: Empire of the Penguin" opened in 2013, and the first new roller coaster since Manta opened in 2009. Mako has 9 designed airtime moments. On February 16, 2016, the first car of the train was shipped and revealed with a front train with a face of a mako shark. In April, SeaWorld began showing a presentation called "Mako Rising" previewing the upcoming hypercoaster in their Nautilis Theater.Ride experienceAfter leaving the station, the train makes a small right turn to a 200-foot lift hill to begin its ascension. After reaching the top, it enters a 200-foot drop, in which the train reaches at a top speed of 73 miles per hour . Then, the train makes a tall, overbanked turn before it goes to large airtime hill. After the moment of weightlessness, Mako enters its unique element, the Hammerhead turn, which is a tight U-turn to the right. Traveling over another camelback hill, Mako makes another airtime turn and goes into a small airtime hill. After it makes its mid-course brake run, Mako makes a small left turn under the lift hill and goes into another airtime hill. After it makes a banked turn to the right, Mako goes into another banked turn to the left over a part of the park's lagoon and makes its final brake run.
Kraken is a steel floorless roller coaster located at SeaWorld Orlando in the United States. Manufactured by Bolliger & Mabillard, the ride features a total of seven inversions including two vertical loops, a dive loop, a spiraling camelback, a cobra roll and a flat spin Kraken opened on June 1, 2000. It is also the world's second longest floorless coaster at 4,177 feet .HistoryIn 1999, Six Flags Great Adventure spent $42 million on new attractions including a prototype Floorless Coaster by Bolliger & Mabillard, Medusa (later Bizarro). The immediate popularity of the ride, led to SeaWorld Orlando and three other amusement parks to announce plans to install Floorless Coasters in 2000; aside from the announcement of Kraken on May 6, 1999, Six Flags Discovery Kingdom announced Medusa, Geauga Lake announced Dominator, and Six Flags Fiesta Texas announced Superman: Krypton Coaster. Kraken was announced as costing approximately $18–20 million. Krakens announcement more than one year out from its opening was an attempt by the park to drive international attendance.