The Walt Disney Birthplace

The Team

Dina Benadon

Project Director, Founder

Born and raised in Los Angeles, where her father founded and built what became one of Hollywood’s largest post-production companies, Dina grew up at his side, gaining first-hand insights into the world of film production.

Dina started her own career at an emerging computer animation company in the early 90s. Encouraged by the artists and the excitement of new technologies, Dina segued into the Theme Park division where she found herself immersed in the creation of cutting-edge attractions.

There, she met fellow enthusiast Brent Young and in 1997, followed in her father’s footsteps by launching, with Brent, Super 78, their own animation company. Super 78 has grown and evolved into a content developer of specialty movies for theme park rides, attractions, museums and science centers. She and Brent (now her husband, as well) live and work in Silverlake and have a seven year old son, Truman.

Dina has earned nominations and awards and is an active Board member for the Themed Entertainment Association and the Producers Guild of America, New Media Council, helping to grow membership and foster new talent in both organizations.

Brent Young

Project Director, Founder

A native of Chicago himself, Brent moved to Los Angeles in the early 90s, where he worked as an assistant film editor in a growing computer animation company that produced animated movies for theme park attractions.

In 1997, he launched a production company with fellow themed attraction producer, Dina Benadon, whom he also later married. Together, they would grow Super 78, their animation studio, into one of the most well-known media production and creative companies in the theme park industry, receiving numerous industry awards and recognition.

Brent is a director, musician and, most passionately, a theme park aficionado who co-hosts “The Season Pass,” a themed entertainment industry-focused iTunes show (now in its tenth year and more popular than ever).

He and his wife live and work in Silverlake, California with their twelve year old son – around the corner from where Walt and Roy made Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs in 1937.

Rey Colón

Chicago Project Lead

Rey Colón is a life-long Chicago resident who has devoted his career to creating opportunities for children, families and community residents in need. Rey has a rich and varied history most recently as Chicago’s 35th Ward Alderman from 2003 to 2015. His former positions include Executive Director of the McCormick Tribune YMCA, Boys and Girls Clubs of Chicago Director, and Area Manager at the Chicago Park District.

Rey has received both local and national recognition for program excellence in education, youth outreach, child development and volunteer empowerment in areas that have enhanced the quality of life for all Chicago residents.

Rey is committed to uniting communities, believes that every child is gifted and shares the enthusiastic vision for establishing a Center for Early Childhood Creativity and Innovation to benefit today’s neighbors surrounding Disney’s Birthplace Home.

Christine Griswold, M.A.

Director, Learning Experiences

Christine is passionate about designing materials and experiences that honor children’s creativity and intelligence.

Her eclectic professional experience includes 15+ years of working with children, parents, and teachers; 14+ years as a researcher, consultant, and curriculum designer in children’s media; 5+ years of writing and developing children’s media; 4+ years in children’s publishing; and multiple years as an invited speaker and college instructor in the field of early childhood education.

Christine designs fun learning-focused materials, media, experiences, and activities for kids and families for a variety of organizations across myriad formats. Recent projects include designing and co-writing cross-curricular activities for the “Boredom Busters” book series on the Epic for Kids learning platform; co-creating and teaching multiple arts-based programs for children aged 3-12, including a kindergarten-to-second grade music program that incorporated dance, percussion instruments, and choral singing through exploring music chosen specifically for how it enhances cultural identity and illustrates the linkage among world cultures; developing an IP with the Jim Henson Company highlighting and supporting the development of creativity and innovative thinking; and teaching Anti-Bias Classrooms, The Multicultural Child, and Art for the Young Child at Citrus College.

Christine belongs to the National Association for the Education of Young Children, the Pedagogical Institute of Los Angeles, and the North American Reggio Emilia Alliance.

Charlie Pipal

Preservation Architect -Art Institute of Chicago

Charles Pipal is a practicing architect and professor in the Historic Preservation Program at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Landscape Architecture and a Master’s Degree in Architecture from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, with a concentration in historic preservation.

He is a past director of Landmarks Illinois, where he served as chair of the Fund and Easement Committee and currently serves as the Chair of the Riverside Preservation Commission and Vice President of the Pleasant Home Foundation. Professor Pipal’s particular professional and academic focus has been on the physical documentation and rehabilitation of historic resources.

In additional to his architectural practice, he is also owner of Blueprint Tours, a destination management company specifically focused on academic and curricular-based travel. He resides in historic Riverside, Illinois with his wife and three sons.

Tim Barton

Former Chicago Landmarks Committee Member

A Chicago native, Timothy Barton is a land use consultant specializing in historic preservation projects. An expert on Chicago history and architecture, he is the former Research Director for the Commission on Chicago Landmarks, a position he held for 11 years, where his work resulted in the landmarking of dozens of properties. These are just a few of the local landmark research projects Timothy oversaw:

• St. James Episcopal Cathedral: 675 N. Wabash Avenue
• Historic Michigan Boulevard District
• Terra Cotta Row: 1048, 1054, 1057 and 1059 W. Oakdale Ave.
• Chicago and North Western Railway Terminal

He is also an expert in local zoning issues and protocol, with a decade’s experience working at the Chicago Department of Planning and Zoning. Finally, Tim also works as a freelance local area researcher through the Chicago History Museum.

I think the Disney House is Chicago’s Equivalent of the Abraham Lincoln Log Cabin.

Tim Samuelson photo

Tim Samuelson

Chicago Cultural Historian

Tim Samuelson has been the city’s cultural historian for the past ten years, functioning as a one-man office of the Department of Cultural Affairs. His job is that of a spokesperson, consultant, historian and storyteller, a wide-ranging position that requires him “to tell the spirit and the history of Chicago” through exhibits, public programs, and collaboration with other cultural institutions, museums, and governmental agencies.

He answers questions, and he does his best to tell the story: what Chicago “is,” and why it is the way that it is. The city’s buildings are a part of that story, though his job and his interests pull him in every direction.

People who know him and/or have worked with him in the past commonly describe his breadth of knowledge as “encyclopedic.”

Scott Byron and Associates

Landscape Architects

Tim Samuelson has been the city’s cultural historian for the past ten years, functioning as a one-man office of the Department of Cultural Affairs. His job is that of a spokesperson, consultant, historian and storyteller, a wide-ranging position that requires him “to tell the spirit and the history of Chicago” through exhibits, public programs, and collaboration with other cultural institutions, museums, and governmental agencies.

He answers questions, and he does his best to tell the story: what Chicago “is,” and why it is the way that it is. The city’s buildings are a part of that story, though his job and his interests pull him in every direction.

People who know him and/or have worked with him in the past commonly describe his breadth of knowledge as “encyclopedic.”