Wouldn’t there be a risk of the crocodiles eating the mongooses?
Wouldn’t there be a risk of the crocodiles eating the mongooses?
36. Etosha house
Zoo Basel, Switzerland
Opened: 2001
Size: 650 square metres (building only)
Inhabitants: 17 African dry country species including Cape ground squirrel, sociable weaver, slender-tailed meerkat and carmine bee-eater
Named after the Etosha National Park in Namibia, famous for its large concentrations of big game, the focus here is on smaller species. The goal of the house is to show the circle of life. Starting in a room with only plants, one passes locusts, several herbivores and insectivores before reaching the apex predator of the house: the slender-tailed meerkat. After that life goes downhill with a flower beetle display, showing detritivores. There is even a predator-prey display where honey bees live next to a colony of carmine bee-eaters. Even if the educational theme of the house is lost on you, this is still a wonderful little place, with high quality enclosures showing several more unknown species. The obvious highlight is the large exhibit which is dominated by a large sociable weaver colony, but also houses Cape ground squirrel, rock hyrax, lovebirds and red-billed hornbill. This exhibit alone would have been a worthy standalone inclusion on this list and the sociable weavers are the big stars here. With well over 50 birds there is always something going on here.
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@lintworm
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@lintworm
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@Maguari
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@lintworm
Similar exhibits: The most famous zoo building focusing on smaller African species must be the Africa Rocks! Complex in Zoo Prague, Czechia, but this building suffers from cramming too many species in one building and many of the tiny terraria are awkward to view. A more high-quality building was opened in the Walter Zoo in Gossau, Switzerland, here meerkats take centre-stage, but there are several smaller mammals, birds and reptiles to be found here too. Basel even has a second high quality Africa building from the same era: Gamgoas. This former carnivore house is now mostly education, but has two fascinating enclosures. One houses termites and the second is a mixed enclosure of nile crocodile, dwarf mongoose, several birds and cichlids.
Zoo Prague:
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@vogelcommando
Walter Zoo Gossau:
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@lintworm
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@lintworm
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@lintworm
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@lintworm
Gamgoas, Zoo Basel:
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@Maguari
![]()
@lintworm
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@lintworm
36. Etosha house
Zoo Basel, Switzerland
Opened: 2001
Size: 650 square metres (building only)
Inhabitants: 17 African dry country species including Cape ground squirrel, sociable weaver, slender-tailed meerkat and carmine bee-eater
Named after the Etosha National Park in Namibia, famous for its large concentrations of big game, the focus here is on smaller species. The goal of the house is to show the circle of life. Starting in a room with only plants, one passes locusts, several herbivores and insectivores before reaching the apex predator of the house: the slender-tailed meerkat. After that life goes downhill with a flower beetle display, showing detritivores. There is even a predator-prey display where honey bees live next to a colony of carmine bee-eaters. Even if the educational theme of the house is lost on you, this is still a wonderful little place, with high quality enclosures showing several more unknown species. The obvious highlight is the large exhibit which is dominated by a large sociable weaver colony, but also houses Cape ground squirrel, rock hyrax, lovebirds and red-billed hornbill. This exhibit alone would have been a worthy standalone inclusion on this list and the sociable weavers are the big stars here. With well over 50 birds there is always something going on here.
![]()
@lintworm
![]()
@lintworm
![]()
@Maguari
![]()
@lintworm
Similar exhibits: The most famous zoo building focusing on smaller African species must be the Africa Rocks! Complex in Zoo Prague, Czechia, but this building suffers from cramming too many species in one building and many of the tiny terraria are awkward to view. A more high-quality building was opened in the Walter Zoo in Gossau, Switzerland, here meerkats take centre-stage, but there are several smaller mammals, birds and reptiles to be found here too. Basel even has a second high quality Africa building from the same era: Gamgoas. This former carnivore house is now mostly education, but has two fascinating enclosures. One houses termites and the second is a mixed enclosure of nile crocodile, dwarf mongoose, several birds and cichlids.
Zoo Prague:
![]()
@vogelcommando
Walter Zoo Gossau:
![]()
@lintworm
![]()
@lintworm
![]()
@lintworm
![]()
@lintworm
Gamgoas, Zoo Basel:
![]()
@Maguari
![]()
@lintworm
![]()
@lintworm
34. Camel paddocks
Tierpark Berlin, Germany
Opened: 1955
Size: 4.5 hectares
Inhabitants: Dromedary camel, Bactrian camel, alpaca, llama, vicuna, guanaco, flamingo
This open meadow is quite literally the centre piece of the forest of trees (and green fences) that is Tierpark Berlin. Whereas many of the earlier enclosures were functional only, the camel paddocks fit perfectly in the surrounding landscape.
36. Etosha house
Zoo Basel, Switzerland
Wouldn’t there be a risk of the crocodiles eating the mongooses?
Isn’t “Africa Rocks” in San Diego and the pavillion at Prague called “Africa from near”?
I have that pavillion on my list, because I really like it. I do agree that most exhibits in it aren’t roomy, but it’s an amazing place of discovery (at least it was when I visited, quite a few years ago). And I usually like the snug feel, so now I wonder how the Etosha pavillion is like![]()
A true gem, imo, and a nice addition to your list. What I perhaps find most noteworthy of Etosha (but also Gamgoas, the exotarium and certain other parts of Zoo Basel), is how they reconcile brutalist (or at least unpretentious, concrete-heavy) architecture, with beautiful naturalistic enclosure design. For me, these create an impression much like in an art or history museum, where the exhibits are constituted by small slabs of (seemingly untouched) nature as precious artwork.
One curiosity: the moat is very shallow, and I saw once a camel standing up to its knees in water and grazing grass on the visitor side. But it did not make a step and walked out.
One of the most interesting zoo exhibits was for years in this building: a mixed predator-prey exhibit of snakes and mice.
Didn't the Africa house change names over the years? It now seems to be called "Africa from up close" indeed.
I personally think the Africa house, together with the jungle house and polar bear exhibit, is the weakest part of the zoo. Too many all-indoor small enclosures for me. With a fascinating collection for sure, but collection alone is not a reason to include it in this thread for any exhibit.
This calls for @Jana! It was called “Africa from near/up close” when I visited in 2006 and 7. I believe the pavillion was just open at the time.
I personally think the Africa house, together with the jungle house and polar bear exhibit, is the weakest part of the zoo
There’s no way they actually had seriously intended for this, right? Successfully obtaining the species is already completely unrealistic, but keeping a rhinoceros indoors year-round is just as shocking.Even though some of the planned species, like Sumatran rhino and clouded leopard, never materialised
This is still about Prague? By "Jungle house" you mean Indonesian jungle?
There’s no way they actually had seriously intended for this, right? Successfully obtaining the species is already completely unrealistic, but keeping a rhinoceros indoors year-round is just as shocking.
You have never watched one strike in person, haven't you?Puff adders (...) are extremely slow
Aren’t they one of the fastest strikers in the world?You have never watched one strike in person, haven't you?
Yes that is the mock rock monstrosity I mean![]()
Given that puff adders do not tend to play football, I'd rather nominate these gentlemen in regard to fastest strikers: 15 Fastest Soccer Players In The World Ranked (2022 Update) | Authority SoccerAren’t they one of the fastest strikers in the world?
37. Gondwanaland
Zoo Leipzig, Germany
Opened: 2011
Size: 16500 square metres
Inhabitants: Wide array of African, Asian, S-American and nocturnal species including giant otter, Malayan tapir, owl-faced monkey and eastern quoll.
Similar exhibits: The Rimbula greenhouse in Wildlands, Emmen, the Netherlands, is the largest tropical greenhouse in a European zoo for now. But despite its size it manages to feel smaller than the other greenhouses. It sometimes feels as if they visited Gondwanaland and managed to not take all the good things. A boat ride and the indoor elephant enclosure take up far too much space to allow for a real rainforest feeling. Copious cross-viewing and extremely visible “behind the scenes'' cages do not help either.
So much love for concrete, so much hate for mock rock...![]()
I am afraid you missed french Gondwanaland with the tropical dome in Beauval…ok I go out![]()