@Zoofan15
All thanks to you have seen the Gorilla exhibit summary on Zoolex thankyou so much (there's a hard to notice mention that the Gorillas technically have access to 1,200 sq m which I assume detracts the moat spatial takings and a bit of the hidden barriers etc which when added is 1,600 sq m). An amazing exhibit still when will have stood occupied by the zoo's Gorillas for 33 years this year!
I didn't think the plans would be on Zoolex as assumed that site only had some exhibits from around the world starting the very late 1990s ie when the internet really took off with everyone in the world (I'd wrongly assumed they only uploaded some projects from a similar time period onwards, for example when I found the Creatures of the Wollemi one for Taronga had assumed that was one of the earliest projects uploaded and shared to the site).
But additionally just saw a similar page for the two Pygmy Hippo exhibits and the former Mandrill exhibits and was really impressed that for a 1992 opened trio of exhibits (until now had mistakenly assumed had opened at same time as Gorilla exhibit) but that each Pygmy Hippo has/had 600 sq m space per exhibit while the Mandrills had 400 sq m (but another 200 sq m in their area for what purposes do not know) but very impressive too. Compare this to say at Taronga and the tiny exhibit yard that Katrina and Cleo the Pygmy Hippos had at the same time (now scrapped and part of the Savannah precinct).
It was really good hearing from you and from Zoolex all these spatial measurements at MZ as 'paints an even clearer picture' of what Melbourne has 'to work with' in terms of their next steps with renovations and species exchanges etc.
Having been most familiar by a long shot with Perth and Taronga Zoo so tend to make comparisons using them, it feels like the Gorilla Forest was truly Melbourne's equivalent of Perth's African Savannah opened during similar time period (the mock fig tree viewing reminded me of the mock rocks and looked at Perth);
;and I guess (again when comparing Melbourne's Gorilla Forest) the equivalent of Taronga's Chimp Park albeit a decade later..but the lush planting and immersive tropical feel of Melbourne's Gorilla Forest shows the decade later process of development (though not knocking Taronga's Chimp Park, it has indeed stood the test of time in relevance, husbandry requirements and public interest with only a little bit of renovation),
;obviously though too MZ's Gorilla Forest was and is a multiple exhibits experience so comparing it to Taronga's Chimp Park am aware am comparing an exhibits precinct to just one exhibit at another zoo (though from memory Taronga did initially 'cram' some Mandrills in at the end of Chimp Park in what would become Snowy's home a few years later, and now the extension of the exhibit from 11 years ago).