Disney Springs has always been a place in motion. Restaurants open and close. Shops rotate in and out. The retail and dining landscape shifts often enough that guests who visit a couple of times a year tend to notice something different each time they walk through. That is by design. Disney Springs is a living destination rather than a static one, and the changes that accumulate over time have generally moved the district toward something more polished and more ambitious than what it was a decade ago.Credit: DisneyBut not every change lands the same way. Some feel like progress. Others feel like the quiet removal of something that was doing more work than people realized, serving a specific need that nothing else in the area was filling. The food trucks at Exposition Park on the West Side fall firmly into that second category, and as of June 7, 2026, they are gone for good.This is not a rumor or a projection. The trucks have been physically removed. The space they occupied is now additional seating. The casual, walk-up dining experience they provided for more than a decade at Disney Springs has ended without a formal announcement or a replacement.There is more changing at Disney Springs beyond the food trucks too, and guests planning visits in the coming weeks and months should know what they are walking into.The Food Trucks Are Officially OutThe removal happened in stages. During a June 2 visit to Disney Springs, the first of the three trucks, Cilantro Urban Eatery, had already been taken out. Cilantro was a family-owned business that brought Latin American flavors to Exposition Park, serving Cuban sandwiches, arepas, tostadas, and ropa vieja to guests who wanted something different from the sit-down restaurants nearby.The remaining two trucks, 4 Rivers Cantina Barbacoa and GoJuice, had their final day of operation on June 7. 4 Rivers Cantina was the most recognized of the three, built around Mexican-inspired dishes including the iconic Taco Cone and newer beef birria offerings that had developed a following among regular Disney Springs visitors. GoJuice served cold beverages and smoothies, including drinks like the Beach Bum and the Green Machine, making it the go-to option for guests who wanted something light and refreshing on a Florida afternoon.Together, those three trucks had been part of Disney Springs for more than a decade, offering a rotating casual dining option in Exposition Park with menus that complemented rather than duplicated what the full-service restaurants in the area provided. The cleared area where they operated now serves as additional seating for guests passing through the West Side.The practical gap they leave is real. The food trucks provided fast, affordable, low-commitment dining at a destination that has steadily moved toward higher price points and longer waits. Guests who used them as a budget-friendly option, a quick stop between shopping, or a way to grab something without committing to a full restaurant experience will not find a direct equivalent in the same area.The Marketplace Co-op Is Mid-RefurbishmentCredit: DisneyAcross Disney Springs in the Marketplace district, the Marketplace Co-op is partially offline for an interior refurbishment.Floor-to-ceiling black construction curtains have gone up inside the store, cordoning off a substantial section of the interior showroom floor. The scale of the curtained area suggests something more significant than a simple merchandise refresh is happening behind it. Whether that means a structural layout change, a new boutique concept, or a full overhaul of a specific section of the floor plan is not something Disney has confirmed.The rest of the Marketplace Co-op remains accessible to guests. The perimeter merchandise and the adjacent Tren-D boutique are both open. But the footprint of the construction zone is large enough that guests who visit expecting the full Marketplace Co-op experience will find a meaningful portion of the shopping floor unavailable.No timeline for the interior refurbishment has been announced. No specific concept has been revealed. The Marketplace Co-op has a history of cycling through interesting and well-executed boutique concepts, from WonderGround Gallery to the runDisney showcase to various specialty collections, so whatever is being built behind those curtains is likely worth waiting for. Getting there in the next few weeks means working around what is currently a partial shopping experience.Other Disney Springs Changes Worth KnowingCredit: Rough Tough, Real Stuff, FlickrThe food trucks and the Marketplace Co-op are part of a broader pattern of simultaneous change across Disney Springs right now.The CrazyShake pop-up by Black Tap, which generated significant social media attention during its run at the former Sprinkles location, closed at the end of May. That spot is now dark with no confirmed replacement announced.The Ghirardelli Soda Fountain and Chocolate Shop, one of the most consistent and recognizable dining and shopping destinations in the Marketplace district, is preparing for a significant relocation and overhaul. When and where Ghirardelli moves is not yet confirmed, but the change will visibly reshape that section of the Marketplace.Cole Haan has been teasing its arrival at Disney Springs, representing one of the incoming additions on the retail side as the outgoing changes continue to accumulate.How This Affects a Disney Springs VisitFor guests with Disney World trips that include a Disney Springs stop, the current state of the West Side and the Marketplace district requires some recalibration of expectations.On the West Side, the food truck option is no longer available. Guests who were planning to use Exposition Park as a quick, affordable dining stop will need to build their meal plan around alternatives. The Marketplace side of Disney Springs has more quick-service density, and planning a food stop there rather than relying on West Side options is the most practical adjustment.For shopping-focused visits to the Marketplace Co-op, the building is open and browsable but the central showroom section is behind construction curtains. If a specific past boutique or experience was the draw, it may not currently be accessible. Checking the current Marketplace Co-op layout before making it a trip centerpiece is worth doing.For guests who counted on Ghirardelli as a reliable stop, keeping an eye on when and where the relocation happens is worthwhile before building it into a Marketplace day.Disney Springs overall remains a strong destination with plenty to eat, shop, and do across both sides of the district. The current changes are real and worth knowing about, but they are also part of a transformation that is adding as much as it removes, and the district that emerges from this period of transition is likely to be a better version of what it is today.Planning a Disney Springs visit and want to know what is currently open and worth your time on both sides of the district? Drop your questions in the comments. We track these changes closely and will help you put together the best possible plan for your visit.The post Disney World Loses 4 Top Locations in Single-Day Closure Event appeared first on Inside the Magic.