Central Park Zoo Home Page
The Central Park Zoo, in the city of New York, was founded in 1864 and is one of the oldest zoos in the United States. It is run by the Wildlife Conservation Society of New York, which also operates the Bronx Zoo, Prospect Park Zoo, Queens Zoo and New York Aquarium. Almost one million visitors walk through the gates every year.
The Central Park Menagerie was founded in 1864, and over time gradually fell into disrepair. In 1934 almost the entire menagerie was bulldozed, and wooden structures were replaced by brick buildings. Thousands of dollars were spent on rebuilding the establishment, and ten months later the newly named Central Park Zoo opened to the public on December 2nd, 1934. The zoo once again fell into disrepair and was closed in 1983, and remained shut for 5 years as $35 million in renovations were completed. The zoo re-opened to the public on August 8th, 1988.
Here is a link to the Central Park Zoo's map:
http://nyzoosandaquarium.com/media/file/CPZmap08.pdf
The main structure is the sea lion pool, and it is loosely surrounded by a Rain Forest building, a Temperate Territory outdoor section, and the Polar Circle building. The entire zoo is only 6 acres in size, but while small it is regarded as a well-designed set of exhibits. Off to the side is the Tisch Children's Zoo, which was added in 1997.
Polar Circle: polar bears, puffins, chinstrap and gentoo penguins.
Rain Forest: a two-storey building with colobus monkeys, cotton-top and golden-headed tamarins, fruit bats, reptiles and amphibians, free-flying tropical birds and leaf-cutter ants.
Temperate Territory: japanese macaques (snow monkeys), red pandas, etc are all north of the famous sea lion pool.
The Central Park Zoo, in the city of New York, was founded in 1864 and is one of the oldest zoos in the United States. It is run by the Wildlife Conservation Society of New York, which also operates the Bronx Zoo, Prospect Park Zoo, Queens Zoo and New York Aquarium. Almost one million visitors walk through the gates every year.
The Central Park Menagerie was founded in 1864, and over time gradually fell into disrepair. In 1934 almost the entire menagerie was bulldozed, and wooden structures were replaced by brick buildings. Thousands of dollars were spent on rebuilding the establishment, and ten months later the newly named Central Park Zoo opened to the public on December 2nd, 1934. The zoo once again fell into disrepair and was closed in 1983, and remained shut for 5 years as $35 million in renovations were completed. The zoo re-opened to the public on August 8th, 1988.
Here is a link to the Central Park Zoo's map:
http://nyzoosandaquarium.com/media/file/CPZmap08.pdf
The main structure is the sea lion pool, and it is loosely surrounded by a Rain Forest building, a Temperate Territory outdoor section, and the Polar Circle building. The entire zoo is only 6 acres in size, but while small it is regarded as a well-designed set of exhibits. Off to the side is the Tisch Children's Zoo, which was added in 1997.
Polar Circle: polar bears, puffins, chinstrap and gentoo penguins.
Rain Forest: a two-storey building with colobus monkeys, cotton-top and golden-headed tamarins, fruit bats, reptiles and amphibians, free-flying tropical birds and leaf-cutter ants.
Temperate Territory: japanese macaques (snow monkeys), red pandas, etc are all north of the famous sea lion pool.