That auction went a bit mad. I attended the IZES meeting at Bristol some years ago and they were selling the black plastic enclosure signs for £1 each, today four of them sold for £680!
Yes, I nabbed a few of them at Zoohistorica myself
That auction went a bit mad. I attended the IZES meeting at Bristol some years ago and they were selling the black plastic enclosure signs for £1 each, today four of them sold for £680!
I can remember when 'spares' of those old 1940-60's era plastic Cage labels were just lying around in the old animal prep and staff areas.! Now today one set fetched over £700 and with the extra 25% charge that's nearer £900 to pay. Some of the prices seemed a bit crazy but good revenue for the zoo.That auction went a bit mad. I attended the IZES meeting at Bristol some years ago and they were selling the black plastic enclosure signs for £1 each, today four of them sold for £680!
That seemed to go pretty well for the zoo.
Highest price I think was a metal sign advertising the zoo suspected to have come from Temple Meads station, sold for £16k.
That auction went a bit mad. I attended the IZES meeting at Bristol some years ago and they were selling the black plastic enclosure signs for £1 each, today four of them sold for £680!
£3200 for the finger plates / door handles from the aquarium doors. I was amazed by that. I wonder if any other zoos in need of money, (Paignton?) will be encouraged to do the same?Pretty much every item sold for considerably higher than it was valued, some of the door handles sold for £1000s when they were valued at £80![]()
Possible reasons for the high prices; 1.it was a very long established and much loved city zoo. 2. The zoo is still high profile as there is ongoing controversy and legal issues surrounding the proposed sale of the site for development. 3. sales of zoo memorabilia like this are rare as you said earlier. 4. Online auction effect? Just a few ideas.I can scarcely believe the prices that things went for, especially considering that the general feeling was that the zoo was just getting rid of a bunch of old items in storage. I'm really curious who bought so many expensive pieces of memorabilia as the numbers being tossed around are vast sums.
But Bristol only did it after closure.Paignton or elsewhere would have to strip things from an existing zoo....£3200 for the finger plates / door handles from the aquarium doors. I was amazed by that. I wonder if any other zoos in need of money, (Paignton?) will be encouraged to do the same?
But Bristol only did it after closure.Paignton or elsewhere would have to strip things from an existing zoo....
Anyone know if this was all the benches in the entire park? I presume some of the larger items are being kept for the “gardens” such as the bear post ?
That seemed to go pretty well for the zoo. I bid on a couple of things but they quickly went well over my budget. Even some random collections of non-animal zoo signage were selling for over £200. See what the bench auction brings.
Highest price I think was a metal sign advertising the zoo suspected to have come from Temple Meads station, sold for £16k.
When did zoo 'memorabilia' start to make such stupid prices?
Bits and pieces could be found in second-hand book-shops for a few shillings, pennies even.
Maybe it is all down to 'Bangers and Cash' and Drew Pritchard? - continually talking up prices on saturation TV?
Certainly I can't imagine a large number of people being likely to have paid over the odds in such a fashion.