Adelaide Zoo:
Natures Playground and Aussie icons:
The Aussie Icons Precinct will include displays of iconic native species such as: emu, koala, kangaroo, kookaburra, wombat, quokka and assorted parrots and an interactive native Children’s Zoo where visitors can get up close and personal. The existing Reptile House will be expanded to serve as a multi-purpose indoor centre displaying nocturnal, reptile and temperate aquatic species. A trail leading visitors across the site to visit 10 of our most ‘dangerous’ Australian animals will commence in this precinct. A new Visitor Information Hub will be developed near the front entrance in an easy to find location to ensure visitors are welcomed and helped to tailor their day onsite. A high visitor impact penguin exhibit and adjacent water play space will also be developed at the front entrance to ensure the public start their visit with a ‘splash’.
Into Africa:
The area could include new exhibits for African Lion, Meerkats, Ruffed Lemur and Aldabra Tortoise, Pygmy Hippopotamus, Colobus Monkey, Fennec Fox and Mandrill. The Ring-tailed Lemurs currently housed at Adelaide will be moved to Monarto Zoo for a new immersive exhibit. The Nocturnal House is no longer fit for purpose and does not meet our sustainability goals. We will pull it down and re-locate residents to the multi-purpose indoor centre near the front entrance or to Monarto Zoo. We will build a state of the art lion exhibit and interactive exhibit for meerkats that is bound to surprise. Aerial walkways within this precinct will provide opportunities for suitable animals to explore in tunnels winding over visitors as they gaze above their heads.The most significant new development planned for this precinct is the introduction of Western Lowland Gorillas.
The Tropical North:
This precinct will see both significant new exhibits and visitor facilities developed onsite including an aquarium with mezzanine and catering outlet that looks out over the site and east to the River Torrens, leading to an outdoor multi-purpose amphitheatre and second entrance to cater for private and out of hours events and aid visitor flow. The area could include new exhibits for Southern Cassowary, Tree Kangaroos, crocodile species and walk-through aviaries featuring spectacular forest birds such as the Palm Cockatoo, Chattering Lory, Rose-crowned Fruit Dove and Noisy Pitta and northern grassland species including Gouldian and Star Finches. The aquarium and surrounds could house aquatic curiosities such as Barramundi, Lungfish, Saratoga, Archer Fish and Freshwater Whipray.
Jungle Journey:
This precinct will see the major development of a multi-storey walkthrough aviary with a raised walkway showcasing our South American animals such as tapirs, capybaras, coati and mara at ground level, and tamarins, marmoset, conures and macaws amongst the canopy. With South American collections now declining in other Australian zoos this precinct will be another point of difference for a visit to Adelaide Zoo.
Renovations of Bamboo Forest:
Three minor developments are proposed for this precinct: to cover the entrance walkway to create an aviary for Chinese birds from our collection including Mandarin Duck and Golden Pheasant, expand the exhibit areas for Red Panda, and investigate creating an aerial walkway for Red Panda to move in and around the adjacent aviary. The aviary could be designed to be dismantled temporarily to cater for peak visitor periods through the precinct. Additional visitor facilities will be built to better cater for events and functions.
Conservation Oz:
The Conservation Oz precinct will strongly emphasise the importance of local conservation and sharing our stories. There could be new exhibits for Tasmanian Devils, wallaby species, bandicoots, Stone Bush-Curlews, Pygmy Blue-tongue Lizards, Rosenberg’s Goanna, Western Swamp Tortoise and threatened local bird species including Orange-bellied Parrot, Regent Honeyeater, Diamond Firetail and Regent Parrot. A sustainability exhibit will be colocated in this precinct. Threatened flora could be showcased in this precinct too.
Jewels of Asia:
Opened in 1995 and further developed in 2006, the Immersion exhibit showcases siamangs, Dusky Langurs, Malayan Tapirs and Malayan Sunbears, as well as endangered Sumatran Orangutan, Sumatran Tiger and White-cheeked Gibbons. Areas for re-development currently house big cats, Tree Kangaroos, African Wild Dogs, Mandrills, Hamadryas Baboons and the Immersion lawn. Many of these exhibits need to be upgraded; we will be looking to relocate several of these animals to other precincts at Adelaide Zoo and move Hamadryas Baboons from our city site to Monarto Zoo. Malayan Tapirs are unlikely to be replaced due to regional health concerns for this species. We plan to undertake three major developments in the Jewels of Asia precinct to introduce Komodo Dragons in the southwest corner, redevelop the big cat exhibits and lawn area to relocate otters, and introduce an exhibit for the endangered and very striking Sri Lankan Leopard. Aerial animal walkways will also be investigated for this precinct.