Folks,
Nationalistic innuendo, while hilariously backward, misses the point. Do you want to have a new idea or simply start a cultural war?
I come from a place much like the position @reduakari described in his post. @taun clearly sees the zoo experience differently and prefers it that way. OK so far.
So why do US and Australian zoos all build the one while UK and many European zoos build the other? What's that about?
1. Do both work equally well for visitors? Do zoos of each type do as well financially in their respective markets?
2. When a UK or European zoo dresses it up (like an American zoo) does the public like it or not like it? Can anyone offer an example of such an exhibit?
3. Why do people feel
OK - the indoor exhibits! That is another matter, I believe; I do not find big differences there..
Why is it OK indoors but not outdoors?
4. Is this all about money? Is it easier for an American zoo to raise multi-millions for a zoo exhibit, while the governance structure and/or economy of European zoos makes that more difficult?
Rather than flailing around prejudices and unexamined opinions, can we try to dig a little deeper - in the spirit of Dan's original post - and see what we discover?
My limited experience working with European and UK (I insist that they are different) zoo staff is that they are conflicted about it. On the one hand they desperately want exhibits as compelling as
Congo Gorilla Forest, yet on the other hand they abhor being too American or Disney. They cannot clearly explain where they draw the line and they have yet to create their uniquely UK or European version of it. Biopark Valencia looks to me like it is trying.
I notice here on Zoochat that people describing the great indoor European exhibits have big awestruck emotional responses to them; yet when they describe outdoor enclosures the responses are more coolly "great for the animals." I do not understand these different standards. How something like Berger's or Masaola can sit beside something like London's gorilla exhibit baffles me (OK, my "sit beside" is intended to be more metaphorical than geographical). If you say Wow when you see an indoor exhibit, how can you be equally happy with the sort of outdoor enclosures you see?