See, but this is not what was being said previously about the exhibit. Prior to now, the complaints, as far as they are reading off to me (and presumably everyone who liked my post) seem to be complaining only about the habitat sizes and the fact that they chose to give their bears large habitats instead of making a bunch of smaller habitats to include more species.
These comments have zero indication that the issue is that the space required for keeping the bears is too great for what is reasonable/manageable for a zoo this size, but rather imply that the zoo is wrong simply for giving the bears a lot of space.
Now I have never been to the Detroit Zoo (I planned to go in 2020 and then again this summer but I don't think that's happening either...) so it will be hard for me to comment further, but from what I can tell, I don't really think the complaint that is now being raised is even fully valid. Detroit has quite a number of megafauna beyond Polar Bears--giraffe, bison, eland, two species of camel, zebra, rhinoceros, gorilla, chimpanzee, Lion, tiger, wolf, and even Grizzly Bears--yet no one seems to be making the claims that Detroit is not a big enough zoo to support these species. Judging purely off the zoo's map (which may not be giving an accurate portrait), Arctic Ring of Life is smaller than most, if not all of the portions of the zoo where those other species are kept.
Additionally, according to
@Moebelle, the two Polar Bear yards combined are about 1.2 acres in size. The zoo's website states it is 125 acres in size so I don't think the issue is the Polar Bears taking up too much valuable space.. I did a quick gallery search for some of the other megafauna the zoos keeps, and to my surprise I found that several of them have similarly large habitats. In particular, the South American grassland looks massive and the Mexican Wolves have a 2 acre yard! So I'm not really sure why the combined 1.2 acre Polar Bear enclosures are talked about with such vitriol and claimed to be so oversized that they're single-handedly flushing out the rest of the zoo's collection while these other, larger habitats for other species go unmentioned.
As for other complaints lofted at the exhibit, lack of bear visibility and the unattractive appearance, I can't comment much as I haven't been. From photos, though, the pack ice habitat looks awful and the overuse of concrete I totally agree with. As for bear visibility, well all I can say is that it is not the bears' job to be fully visible for you. We all love animals and we'd all love to see them fully visible at their best angle, but part of what makes a zoo exhibit good is whether or not the animals have a choice to removed themselves from those picture perfect scenarios. Just because you don't see an animal using a specific portion of their habitat often during visitor hours, does not mean they don't use it and definitely doesn't mean they don't deserve to have it.
Please point to me where there is this general consensus that Arctic Ring of Life is one of the best zoo exhibits ever built.
I know the bear-seal underwater dynamic is often praised but otherwise how many people are claiming this exhibit is as great as you're implying?
Okay... who besides themselves has claimed this to be one of the most important zoo exhibits ever built?
~Thylo