Man, it seems many have turned sour on Cincinnati recently. I had no idea the giraffe barn was so tiny. I always thought Milwaukees giraffe barn that dated back to the 50s was small, yet that building is about the twice the size of Cincis relatively recent development. It is genuinely puzzling as to why they thought that would be acceptable. Then again this the same place responsible for hippo cove. The architecture may look a bit baffling, but I would be inclined to agree that moving the giraffes here would be the best option. That doesn't make it any less baffling that an exhibit only about 10 years old is already outdated.
Elephant Trek looks like it will be a fantastic development, but besides that the future looks rather uncertain at Cincinnati.
@Moebelle made a comment a little while ago claiming the zoo was going the direction of a glorified children's zoo. I wasn't sure what that meant originally, but I now see what is in reference here. The rope course on top of the former Sumatran rhino yard is rather symbolic of that direction, don't you think?
As an aside, does anyone know if Elephant Trek will be one large yard or several yards? I thought the latter but the rendering appear to show one large space. I wonder how the zoo plans to merge the existing herd with Dublin herd, not to mention future males, if thats the case.
This is something I have actually thought about alot recently. I can understand the reasoning for many zoos wanted a dedicated Herpetarium such as the ones you mentioned above, but I personally like seeing various herps spread throughout a zoo. I think having smaller reptiles and birds alongside the more charismatic megafauna help create a more complete representation of the environment an exhibit complex is themed around, showing how diverse different parts of the world are. In most reptile houses, many species except the exceptionally popular ones - gators, crocs, komodos, large snakes - are often glossed over as to the general public it just looks like lizard after lizard in similar looking exhibits. Same applies to birds, albeit to a lesser extent.