Free-to-enter Collections in European Parks

Kalaw

Well-Known Member
Today I visited the delightful Voliere Zurich.

This wonderful little collection, who can trace its origins to a rescue centre for native wildlife in 1902, is now a sizeable bird house of sorts, with delightful aviaries for a selection of birds, including a few rarities, both indoors and outdoors (although the latter was sadly closed during my visit). The original rescue centre still remains, and to this day it rescues and rehabilitates more native birds than any other institution in Switzerland, according to their website.

The Voliere is free to enter, and, although tiny, is very good, speciose and significant for a free display. I visited with family members, who believe that such things (small, free-to-enter zoos in public parks across Europe) are relatively common in Europe, even mentioning a German cafe they once saw equipped with an aviary that featured flamingos, although sadly they cannot remember the exact location.

This got me thinking, how many of these exist across Europe? Small zoos, in public parks or other such areas, that are free to enter and decently big in scale (more than just a couple of aviaries). My local ‘zoo’ might actually meet this criteria - the small farm in Crystal Palace Park has a sizeable Exotics Room, with Meerkats and Laughing Kookaburras, although the domestic focus seems to make it feel less like a zoological collection in the same sense as Voliere Zurich.

I would be very interested and grateful if other members can inform me of any other prominent examples of this across Europe, and is this as common a thing on the continent as I am lead to believe.
 
Tierpark Wels is a particularly excellent and rarity-stuffed example in Austria!
 
I would be very interested and grateful if other members can inform me of any other prominent examples of this across Europe, and is this as common a thing on the continent as I am lead to believe.

It is not exactly common, but there are plenty of examples which include:
- Tierpark Lange Erlen in Basel, a collection with mostly native animals, with a about 40 species/races present.
- Zoo de Lyon probably the biggest ABC zoo that is free.
- Tierpark Oberwald in Karlsruhe, unfenced piece of forest with some rare hoofstock like goitered gazelle and Rocky Mountain goat
- Freigelaende des Nationalpark Bayerischer Wald I & II, 2 large and excellent wildparks which don't even have a gate
- Freilandterrarium Stein, near Nuremberg. A small collection with European amphibians, fish and reptiles in small but well-designed open-air terraria (and a small aquarium)
- Mundenhof in Freiburg, Germany, mostly domestics in huge paddocks but also a fantastic crab-eating macaque enclosure and possibly the only yellow-throated martens in Europe that aren't behind a paywall.
- The flower garden in Wien-Hirschstetten has quite a number of animal displays, mostly birds and reptiles but also wild cats, and a free-ranging souslik colony.
 
Formerly Montpellier Zoo has almost entirely been free, although I don’t know what the situation is down there anymore as I haven’t been in a while and it’s been in some financial trouble…
 
Wildnispark Zuerich - Wildpark Langenberg has also free entry. It is sizewise the biggest animal park in Switzerland, exhibiting a dozen of species including brown bear, wolf, lynx, moose and alpine ibex.
 
Switzerland has more such aviaries located in open public parks. There are aviaries in Olten, Sankt Gallen and Zug. They are small but they keep quite good birds, for example Waldrapps.

Zootierliste lists also: Aarau, Arbon, Biel, Langenthal, Sissach, Solothurn, Stansstad, Thun, Wildegg, Winterthur and Zofingen, but I know nothing about them. In fact, I visited some of these towns without knowing that such aviaries exist. To my knowledge, Switzerland is the only place with a tradition of such city aviaries.

Botanical Garden in Basel has long kept a small collection of unusual tropical birds, basilisks and frogs in its greenhouse - again free to enter. The greenhouse was rebuilt for some years and has just opened again, I am not sure if the birds are back there.

Wildnispark Zuerich - Wildpark Langenberg has also free entry.

This one comes with a catch - the zoo is free, but parking costs CHF10. And the zoo is awkward to reach by public transport.

There is also an unusual place called Barenpark Arosa. They are two big, natural enclosures with Brown Bears located on a mountain slope above the ski resort of Arosa. You can see everything from outside, and a cable car goes over the place. You can also enter a small platform (paid) but this only gives you a look from another angle. It may be the only zoo where one can see animals while skiing.
 
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Poznan Old Zoo is also free to enter for over a decade. It has a diverse collection of birds, monkeys, lemurs, small mammals, red river hogs, peccaries and domestic animals. There is a rich collection of fish and herps including Komodo dragons and three species of crocs, but part or all is paid to enter, although only a nominal fee.
 
Most of the little bird parks at the rhine valley have free entry, but to support them a little optional donation is expected. Examples are Viernheim, Bobenheim-Roxheim, Großrohrheim, Linkenheim-Hochstetten or three small parcs at the community Stutensee near Karlsruhe.
 
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