I couldn't disagree with you more I'm afraid. The website is modern, yet simple... And also professional. I find it easy to navigate, more so than many other zoo websites...
Do you have a link to the website please? I've just tried to google it and I'm not having much luck finding it (I'm probablt being thick - it has been a long day!)
I do think the opening date seems a bit ambitious but I get the impression the initial collection will be quite humble - so if they can get the site sorted it may not be so unrealistic.
There's some strange terminology in the website, they intend to be a "moral beacon" they'll have a "social science project" aimed at "at risk people" such as "singer mothers" .
They sound like the Jehovah's Witnesses.
and why they trumpeted the building as being many things to many groups of people when it opened -cafe for truck drivers, meeting place for ethnic groups in local community, etc.).
...I haven't seen too many of those types there on my visits...![]()
I personally feel the opening Summer 2020 is very ambitious. To this date, there is no confirmed site, no planning in place for any change of green belt to brown belt land, no plans for any exhibits and no building work started at all. Single Zoo's seem to take 12-18 months just to build one exhibit and that's after months of planning. I would be very surprised if this place is anywhere close to opening in 2020.
Can't see £8M going very far these days.
£80! that couldn't have covered the cost of the materials let alone labour. Was it built by people doing community service?You never know - it's certainly possible to build a pretty good enclosure for a lot cheaper than one would think!
This one for Pallas Cat cost £80.
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Yes when you consider it must cover many things before the first animal enclosure is constructed:Can't see £8M going very far these days.
Since I was the source of the original report about this enclosure (Highland Wildlife Park - Report on HWP Tour with Douglas Richardson) I think I ought to clarify this point.£80! that couldn't have covered the cost of the materials let alone labour. Was it built by people doing community service?
You never know - it's certainly possible to build a pretty good enclosure for a lot cheaper than one would think!
This one for Pallas Cat cost £80.
![]()
Since I was the source of the original report about this enclosure (Highland Wildlife Park - Report on HWP Tour with Douglas Richardson) I think I ought to clarify this point.
This enclosure for Pallas's cats at the Highland Wildlife Park was originally constructed as an aviary for choughs. When I first visited HWP in 2008 it held a pair of Himalayan snowcocks.
I was given a tour of the Park by Douglas Richardson in 2011, arranged through ZooChat and reported in the thread mentioned above. At that time the enclosure had recently been converted for a pair of Pallas's cats and their subsequent kittens. He told me that most of the materials required came from the Park's stores or were recycled, so the total extra expenditure was only £85. I presume that the work was done in-house and so there was no extra cost for labour.
£8m will buy lots of fence posts and wire mesh: but surveying, designing, providing services like power, water and waste water drainage all add to costs, then add in the expenditure for materials and labour for any buildings that are more sophisticated than wooden sheds and £8m seems a much more limited sum.