Austin Aquarium Austin Aquarium trip report May 8th 2024

SwampDonkey

In the Swamp
Premium Member
5+ year member
I visited the Austin Aquarium May 8th 2024. The aquarium opens at 10AM and I was there right when they opened, my flight from Tampa having arrive around 8:30. This is the first "strip mall" aquarium that I have been to. I have been to SeaLife Orlando, but that is not really the same as these small family oriented low budget places. Whereas SeaLife is AZA accredited, the Austin Aquarium is not and does not aim to be......at all.

Austin is strange in that it is now a large city that lacks a regular zoo or aquarium. The Austin Aquarium is owned/founded by the same notorious group that brings you such shining stars as the SeaQuest aquariums and the San Antonio Aquarium - not the best group to put it kindly. Still, I had an hour to kill before my meeting and I had never been to this place, even when I lived in Austin.

As of writing the adult ticket price is $24.95 and kids are $19.95.

This place is not large, I took a leisurely hour to see it, but I saw one family blaze through in about 10 minutes. Their main motivation is to charge you for anything. You can feed pretty much every animal there, and they charge you "tokens" that you buy when you go in. They also have "foot cleaning" from fish, the "hurricane machine", and "experiences" with essentially everything else.

Most of the small tanks were unmemorable and pretty bare, and ALL of them had a very annoying blue light on them, except for one seahorse tank. There are two large touch tanks with rays and sharks as well as other tanks that would fall into the medium size to me. Most of the aquarium tanks were actually decent and if this place was just/mostly aquarium and herp in origin then it would be rather OK.....but then there are the mammals and birds. (more on that later). The herp tanks were largely nice (with the exception of the tortoise enclosures), although lacking adequate signage.

On the subject of signs. Most of the signs were digital and looked nice, but they were really just all over the place. Some were static and signed animals not in that tank, most were rotating and just rotated for EVERYTHING in that area. The herps in particular just rotated for all the herps, so you could be looking at Solomon island skinks and see a sign for poison dart frogs. They were entirely unhelpful.

First area:
The first area you enter holds a medium size cichlid tank, two moon jelly wall tanks as well as tanks for a few other small fish and anenome. There is also a rather strange starfish touch tank and a SUPER strange boat split in half for green iguana and tortoise. I have no idea what keeps the iguana from just walking out or from swatting people with its tail. This area also holds a fairly large capybara enclosure and pacific octopus cave.

Cichlid tank:
full


Capybara:
full


Strange touch tank:
full


Super strange boat:
full


Octopus cave:
full


View leaving the gallery:
full


Gallery #2:

The second gallery holds the largest touch tank that holds rays and sharks: Southern rays, cownose rays, one bamboo shark, two guitarfish, and some small saltwater fish. As it goes it is a pretty solid tank for these animals. This area also holds various wall tanks for fish....all lit with an INCREADIBLY annoying blue light. These tanks did not used to be lit that way, pictures from 2015 show normal lighting. It makes seeing the fish nearly impossible. By and large the big tank is nice but all the wall tanks were forgettable.

Largest touch pool with sharks and rays:
full


Wall tanks:
full



Gallery #3:
This are holds various tanks for reef fish ( a decent tank), freshwater fish, "hand cleaning" doctor fish, axolotl, and a two toed sloth enclosure. Everything here was OK, there was even a underwater crawl space in one of the salt tanks.

Reef fish:
full


Underwater crawl space:
full


sloth:
full


Gallery #4

OK, here is where things get a bit worse. This space is a large open area that contains the party area as well as enclosures for African penguins, red-ruffed lemur, bennet's wallaby, black and white lemur, tortoises, parakeets, and a large koi and turtle pond.

The penguins enclosure seemed to hold 3 animals. Overall I have seen worse, but the pool is far from adequately sized, barely large enough for a penguin to get fully under the water. However, at least they had different types of substrate options and the actual size was not bad for three birds.

All of the lemur cages were smallish and contained three animals each. There were some climbing areas, but not a lot.

The wallaby enclosure was super strange. There were a few wallabies in the back but they are housed with chickens, cockatiels, golden pheasant, and red fronted amazons. Just strange.

The koi pond was pretty big, but it was absolutely PACKED with fish, a few ducks, and at least one turtle. There was land space in the back too, but none of the land animals were using it for some reason. Off to the side of this pond is a small enclosure for un-signed tortoise (maybe Hermans or Greek?) as well as tegu.

Across from the pond was the parakeet aviary...it was just a large screen box with loads of parakeets. Beside this was a very dark enclosure for prehensile tailed porcupine and a the previously mentioned black and white lemurs. This is also where an very undersized enclosure for a sulcata tortoise was.

Lastly there was an alright eel tank.

Penguins:
full


Red-ruffed lemur:
full


Wallaby menagerie:
full


Koi:
full


Sulcata:
full


Eel:
full



part 2 upcoming.
 
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Part 2

Gallery #5

This is where the herps are, save the previously mentioned tortoises and iguana.

This is probably the best part of the facility. All of the tanks use real plants and are of more or less adequate size, except the under-sized Burmese python cage. The tanks for Solomon island skinks, Cuban knight anoles, and gecko were surprisingly nice and spacious. The morlet's crocodile tank was adequate for the very young animal. This gallery also had a tank with archer fish and the strange foot cleaning add on.

The signage was terrible here, you never knew what was going to pop up on the digital sign. So unless you saw the animal it could be anything in there.

Cuban knight anole:
full


Morelet's Crocodile:
full


Solomon Island skink:
full


Burmese Python:
full


Foot Cleaning station:
full


Herp hall view:
full


Gallery #6 - the final gallery:
Leaving the herps takes you to the last area. This gallery holds a large touch tank with bamboo sharks and one guitarfish. It is a nice large tank, nothing to complain about really. There is also a side tank for a "shark nursery". This nursery was empty when I visited. Across from the big tank is a decent sized aviary with two keel-billed toucans.

Large tank:
full


Toucans:
full


Leaving this last gallery takes you back to where you can in - a large gift shop. I did not shop this time around....I was not in the market for anything from this place. When you leave or enter you also pass a large enclosure for reticulated python. This is a strange place for that animal as the temp would be very difficult to maintain due to opening and closing of the main doors and the enclosure being made out of mesh.

Retic cage:
full


Conclusion:
Ok, this place is just too weird and costs too much for me to justify ever going back. I managed about an hour here, but if you are not paying for the extras and did not stop to stare into every tank (I even went through a second time) you could easily blow through here in 20 minutes. There just is not a lot to see. The floors are all painted concrete and most of them are in sore need or repainting. Most of the animals look well cared for, but some of the enclosures are way to small. I hate the blue lighting throughout the aquarium area. The digital signs are terrible, if they were just for that tank then they would be fine, but since they rotate by gallery they are hardly usable.

I will say that since I was there right when they opened I interreacted with probably 10 staff members. All of them were friendly, helpful, and the few I spoke with about animals seemed to know what they were talking about. Everything was clean and it did not smell. Compared to Rainforest Adventures in Pigeon Forge, which smelled upon entry (also right when it opened for the day).

I cannot say that I will ever be back, I think that it costs too much for me for what it has to offer. My pictures probably make it look better than it is...and my pictures are not great.

Out of the two, the Austin Zoo is a better pick....and that is not saying much to be honest. As much as it pains me, I cannot recommend any zoochatter stop here unless you just want to add a number to your zoo visit life list.
 
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Thanks for the review of Austin Aquarium, a place so tiny and obscure that I briefly forgot that I'd even been there. Ha! It opened in 2013 and I was there in the summer of 2015, completing an awful quartet of aquariums in Austin, San Antonio, Portland and Boise. At that time, all 4 were owned by the infamous Covino Brothers and all 4 were very poor facilities. I literally only toured them to rack up my zoo numbers and out of some twisted curiosity. For the zoo nerds who bash the Sea Life franchises, the average Sea Life is a whole other level compared to these privately-run aquatic disasters.

I was in and out of Austin Aquarium in 25 minutes back in 2015 and I can't imagine anyone purchasing an annual membership. Even with young kids, a family could go once and see how junky everything is and then never return. Even basic things such as a clean, well-maintained floor, or not having garbage around the tanks, were not dealt with. Nevertheless, there must be a market for these places because more seem to pop up here and there around the USA.
 
I can't imagine anyone purchasing an annual membership. Even with young kids, a family could go once and see how junky everything is and then never return
Ha, this is so accurate. I briefly thought about a membership as it is $50 for an adult and comes with two guest tickets. I thought that it would be worth it if I took my wife and son when we go later this year....but once I went into the first gallery I literally said out loud "yeah, I am not coming back here".

I will say that the place was very clean when I was there, in spite of the other issues.

Honestly though, Austin kind of hurts for things to do with kids. No good zoo or aquarium, and no children's museums. It is a GREAT city for young adults and adults, but not so much for kids other than some great playgrounds and some small water parks.
For the zoo nerds who bash the Sea Life franchises, the average Sea Life is a whole other level compared to these privately-run aquatic disasters.
That's the truth. SeaLife is the Monterey Bay Aquarium compared to these places. The wall tanks were adequate, but nothing better than most aquarium stores.
 
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