I guess I would have though they would have a rendering or something, especially after the Lantern Festival did so well with Asian Highlands this year. It would make sense if Akron was announcing something, that they would wait. If memory serves me correctly, the CMZ announced both Asian Highlands and the new Cheetah exhibit to open back to back summers in '18 and '19. We did not really see a rendering for Asian Highlands until the winter months, maybe January or February, maybe they are on the same timeline again. For these smaller sized endeavors, I don't think they need as much fanfare or at least maybe that's how they see it.
Ok, so are the Klipspringers still there or are they gone?Asian Highlands was formally announced and major construction began in August. There was a small sign there before though. The last two exhibits followed a Labor Day to Memorial Day construction timeline. The closure of Monkey Island may have changed the timeline. The zoo is figuring out what to do with the area. The Colobus monkeys have moved into the former leopard exhibit now. That is where the cheetah exhibit was going to go.
Ok, so are the Klipspringers still there or are they gone?
Any other news from the agenda?Cleveland Metroparks board meeting agenda is out. No cheetah exhibit news. I am now predicting that it will not open for next summer. It is getting too late to start construction.
Any other news from the agenda?
Interesting...I wonder where the shortfall is. They seemed to have been doing well momentum-wise going all the way back to Elephant Crossing. They've built a successful event center that is one of the hardest spots to rent out for the weekends, more funding from the carousel too. Tiger Passage was deemed a success and they promoted Asian Highlands a lot. While I still find the exhibit slightly underwhelming at this point, the Lantern Festival seemed to be a huge hit.
That seems like a fairly logical and fair move on their part. Although I do find it curious that Akron is simultaneously building a new tiger/red panda exhibit immediately after CMZ put considerable resources into Tiger Passage and Asian Highlands. I'd be a little salty about that if I was an admin.I think the closure of Monkey Island has something to do with the delay. Path reconfigurations in Africa might also be part of the reason. With Akron opening Pride of Africa next Memorial Day weekend (It was announced today), Cleveland may not want to open an Africa exhibit the same time as Akron. They are in the same media market after all.
That seems like a fairly logical and fair move on their part. Although I do find it curious that Akron is simultaneously building a new tiger/red panda exhibit immediately after CMZ put considerable resources into Tiger Passage and Asian Highlands. I'd be a little salty about that if I was an admin.
It only makes sense for the momentum to slow a bit. Their development and fundraising staff must have been working tremendously hard on so many small scale projects with different objectives and approaches. As someone who dabbles in both fields, its sometimes easier to have one, multi-year extremely expensive project then several smaller but much more aggressive ones. The time from concept to announcement to build for these past few is remarkable - a lot of people were probably stressing out on overtime to get these done within the timeline.
Akron's has been in the planning stages since at least 2015. Probably earlier. The size of the current exhibits are the main reason. We cannot have breeding permission from the SSPs without larger exhibits. The exhibit was originally going to remain one, but the architects told them two separate exhibits were better idea. As Pride of Africa opens, Tiger Valley can close for Wild Asia construction. This is the largest expansion in Akron's history.
Cleveland has needed some smaller and medium sized projects because there is too long of a gap between large capital investments. There are enough smaller to medium projects that could be done. I have been a member of Cleveland for a while. I know.
I think this has nothing to do with the two facilities being upset with each other. They are in the same market and each (especially Akron) must be realistic about competing for the visiting public's leisure time and money. But they also have to consider the expectations of their own members and wider community as well as funding availabilitySeems only fair that Akron has done their planning in the order they have without big brother getting upset about the similarities that really can't be avoided. How I'm looking at it they are just going to have to switch off Asia, Africa, Asia, Africa If they don't want to screw each other over.
I think this has nothing to do with the two facilities being upset with each other. They are in the same market and each (especially Akron) must be realistic about competing for the visiting public's leisure time and money. But they also have to consider the expectations of their own members and wider community as well as funding availability