Scheme to improve zoo
(Sydney Morning Herald, May 21, 1976)
Taronga Zoo may get a train, a chairlift and a new restaurant if its board accepts a research firm's recommendations. The zoo commissioned the communication research and consulting firm of H.C. Mackay Pty Ltd to study community attitudes towards the zoo. The study, conducted last month, found that one of the main complaints about spending a day at the zoo was that it was very tiring, particularly for people with children.
"A motor train which ran a set route around the zoo, picking up and setting down customers along the way, would be a colourful feature of a day at the zoo," the report said.
"The installation of a chairlift would be a tourist attraction in its own right as well as solving the problem of the long walk uphill."
The report found that the strongest criticism of the zoo was that the food was "terrible and expensive." It recommended the introduction of one or more take-away food bars selling hamburgers or chicken pieces. The researchers found that many visitors to the zoo wanted more information about feeding times for the animals.
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Largely, the recommendations did eventuate, albeit after some time. Times for keeper talks, often including animal feeding, have been included on the map for some time. The Sky Safari was opened in the 1980s, and the Taronga Food Market was built in the early 2000s and opened in 2004 (open to correction on these dates).
The Zoo 2000 masterplan included a tram along the eastern side of the zoo through the 'Heart of the Zoo' precinct, although this never eventuated. I do recall a motor train (a long vehicle styled to look like a train and called the Zoo Train) during my childhood in the 2000s. I'm not sure when it was introduced, nor when it stopped running (if I were to guess, I would say around 2015 when construction started on Sumatran Tiger Adventure/Tiger Trek, which would have significantly shortened the train route).