Chester Zoo Enclosures and areas of historical significance: how should they be dealt with?

mukisi

Well-Known Member
H Gibbins wants to see the cattle shed knocked down. Sacrilege!!! I started ny full time zoo career in that building in 1959,it was the zebra house then.Fond memories, it was also thr first zoo job for Martin Lacey,later to become the owner of the great British Circus. The building does not have the same feel. The stall fronts were all weldmesh and the partitions hard wood salvaged from the transport boxes from Africa. Most old zoos willhave old buildings with 'history'.But progress is progress.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
H Gibbins wants to see the cattle shed knocked down. Sacrilege!!! I started ny full time zoo career in that building in 1959,it was the zebra house then.Fond memories, it was also thr first zoo job for Martin Lacey,later to become the owner of the great British Circus. The building does not have the same feel. The stall fronts were all weldmesh and the partitions hard wood salvaged from the transport boxes from Africa. Most old zoos willhave old buildings with 'history'.But progress is progress.

Keep it, keep it, keep it.

Keep it, keep it.

Keep it.

Have I made my view clear?

:)
 
Presumably none of Chester's older buildings have listed status?

I remember that house when it seemed to be full of Grevy Zebras and of course the two Zebroids as well.
 
Presumably none of Chester's older buildings have listed status?

I remember that house when it seemed to be full of Grevy Zebras and of course the two Zebroids as well.

The building housed the zoo's Grevy's zebras until the new enclosure was opened in 1972. The enclosure where the zebras and bongos are now.

I last saw a Grevy's there in 1984 housed with a Grant's, both animals were due to be exported.

I also remember the onagers and kulans, and their hybrids in the mid 1970s.
 
Presumably none of Chester's older buildings have listed status?

I remember that house when it seemed to be full of Grevy Zebras and of course the two Zebroids as well.

The only part of the zoo safe from being demolished in the course of time if the interests of the zoo require it is Oakfield Manor. Everything else can - and likely one day will - go.
 
The only part of the zoo safe from being demolished in the course of time if the interests of the zoo require it is Oakfield Manor. Everything else can - and likely one day will - go.

The old stable block (between the lions and the tigers) is also listed like the House (both Grade II). The old zoo motto was 'always building' which should be coupled with 'often refurbishing' and 'frequently demolishing'.

Alan
 
The old zoo motto was 'always building' which should be coupled with 'often refurbishing' and 'frequently demolishing'.

Alan

I think that is probably healthier for a Zoo than being hamstrung with listed buildings completely out of kilter with modern zoo practices, such as Dudley and to a lesser extent, ZSL are.
 
zebra house 1960; Cattle shed 2013

The zebra house in 1960 housed 2 Zebroids, 3 Grevys and 6-8 Grants zebra, a breding goup of white-bearded gnu, a breeding group of beisa oryx and a south american tapir, the section had 2 paddocks where RORA is housing emu ,wallabies,llama; the section also had all the enclosures between the 2 bridges,the beaver pool,a coypu pit ,a raccoon pit and the Wolverine enclosure [still there but well hidden. The condor pen had kamchatka bears It kept 2 0f us quite busy. The zebra house was heated in those days and the coke had to be barowe round from the back of the giraffe house. Happy days!!
Slightly off subject
 
The old stable block (between the lions and the tigers) is also listed like the House (both Grade II). The old zoo motto was 'always building' which should be coupled with 'often refurbishing' and 'frequently demolishing'.

Alan

Ah yes - forgot the old stable block :)
 
Chester Zoo -- The Islands Development

Any more information about those Zebroids?
 
Any more information about those Zebroids?

They were two Grevy’s zebra X horse hybrids, both males, which were born in Kenya.

Chester Zoo acquired them from a circus in 1957; one lived in the zoo for about twenty years, the other for about thirty years.
 
Chester Zoo The Isłands...

In Cecil Webb's Autobiography 'A Wanderer in the Wind', there's a photo of a Grevy's x Arab, with the mother, bred by Raymond Hook in Kenya. I wonder if this animal was one of the two that ended up at Chester. Dates would fit.
 
In Cecil Webb's Autobiography 'A Wanderer in the Wind', there's a photo of a Grevy's x Arab, with the mother, bred by Raymond Hook in Kenya. I wonder if this animal was one of the two that ended up at Chester. Dates would fit.

The Chester animals were certainly bred by Raymond Hook, however, I believe that he bred several Grevy's zebra X horse hybrids about this time, so there is no guarantee that the individual illustrated in this book is actually one of those that subsequently went to Chester.
 
Chester Zoo acquired them from a circus in 1957; one lived in the zoo for about twenty years, the other for about thirty years.

I believe they weren't somehow a deliberate acquisition- didn't the circus deposit them with the Zoo or leave them behind or something like that?
 
The zebra house in 1960 housed 2 Zebroids, 3 Grevys and 6-8 Grants zebra, a breding goup of white-bearded gnu, a breeding group of beisa oryx and a south american tapir, the section had 2 paddocks where RORA is housing emu ,wallabies,llama; the section also had all the enclosures between the 2 bridges,the beaver pool,a coypu pit ,a raccoon pit and the Wolverine enclosure [still there but well hidden. The condor pen had kamchatka bears It kept 2 0f us quite busy. The zebra house was heated in those days and the coke had to be barowe round from the back of the giraffe house. Happy days!!
Slightly off subject

I remember them all, except the tapir. Indeed in 1960, the Kamchatka bear enclosure and the smaller exhibits around it must have been some of the newest buildings in the zoo. The bridge over Flag Lane must have been built a little afterwards to access the new Pachyderm House, where I do remember seeing both South American and Malayan tapirs.
Those two paddocks with the wallabies etc (and possibly Soay sheep too) had very rough grass and funny crenellated breeze block walls, if I remember them correctly.

Alan
 
I believe they weren't somehow a deliberate acquisition- didn't the circus deposit them with the Zoo or leave them behind or something like that?

Yes, I heard a similar rumour although I’m not sure of the full details.

The version that I heard, although I cannot vouch for its accuracy, was that the circus asked the zoo to provide temporary accommodation for the zebroids. However, the circus never returned to collect them .....so they remained in the zoo for decades.

Sorry to continue with this off-topic digression from the Islands development...
 
Last edited:
Chester Zoo -- The Islands....

Fascinating stuff though. Of course, no zoo would hold Zebroids nowadays....
 
The only part of the zoo safe from being demolished in the course of time if the interests of the zoo require it is Oakfield Manor. Everything else can - and likely one day will - go.
Also here to stay, if the bats have any say in it, is The Fountain Shop.
The old stable block (between the lions and the tigers) is also listed like the House (both Grade II). The old zoo motto was 'always building' which should be coupled with 'often refurbishing' and 'frequently demolishing'.
When a zoo has oodles of space at its disposal, as does Chester, there's no reason why some small footprint, inoffensive buildings shouldn't stay for historic purposes, the old cattle house being one of them. This is not the case for zoos such as Dudley for example, where there's no room for new enclosures without knocking something down.
 
When a zoo has oodles of space at its disposal, as does Chester, there's no reason why some small footprint, inoffensive buildings shouldn't stay for historic purposes, the old cattle house being one of them. This is not the case for zoos such as Dudley for example, where there's no room for new enclosures without knocking something down.

I was going to add something similar- the odd historic building is definately worth keeping within a large modern zoo. It is a very effective reminder of how the Zoo used to be. The problem is choosing which ones to keep.
 
Back
Top