My understanding has always been that the Aquarium has been in a far worse state of repair than the rest of the Mappins, much of which appears to remain structurally sound. Even after the zoo decided to close the former two or three years back, there were discussions (never official plans though) on utilising the mountains for animals again. It would be a shame (and expensive!) to demolish such an iconic structure when much of it could still be used.
There is a pressing need to bring in something charismatic at a fairly low cost and a mid-sized bear species is the obvious choice. The sloth bears were carted off to Whipsnade as they were a 'poor exhibit' (!) but were probably too retiring for an open space. Similarly, sun bears would probably be too small to make much of an impression in such a large area. As I doubt ZSL would acquire pandas in the current climate, that leaves spectacled bears - rare, charismatic and (fairly) showy - which leaves open the possibility of a mixed species exhibits (e.g. with black howlers at Jersey).
If the expensive plans for the Snowdon were abandoned in favour of a low-key renovation, a considerable sum would be freed up to accomplish this (as reference point, in today's money, the 1997 renovation for sloth bears would cost around £300,000). Supplementary exhibits (giant otters? flamingos?) would add to the expense but, if they are as stable as I've been led to believe, the mountains could house a flock of vicuna with minimal refurbishment.
On the other hand, I doubt ZSL could do much with the Aquarium in the near future. In hindsight, it is a shame that the zoo chose to apply for lottery funding for the Snowdon (which could be refurbished on a much lower budget) rather than the Aquarium - for which there is no cheap or easy option.
There is a pressing need to bring in something charismatic at a fairly low cost and a mid-sized bear species is the obvious choice. The sloth bears were carted off to Whipsnade as they were a 'poor exhibit' (!) but were probably too retiring for an open space. Similarly, sun bears would probably be too small to make much of an impression in such a large area. As I doubt ZSL would acquire pandas in the current climate, that leaves spectacled bears - rare, charismatic and (fairly) showy - which leaves open the possibility of a mixed species exhibits (e.g. with black howlers at Jersey).
If the expensive plans for the Snowdon were abandoned in favour of a low-key renovation, a considerable sum would be freed up to accomplish this (as reference point, in today's money, the 1997 renovation for sloth bears would cost around £300,000). Supplementary exhibits (giant otters? flamingos?) would add to the expense but, if they are as stable as I've been led to believe, the mountains could house a flock of vicuna with minimal refurbishment.
On the other hand, I doubt ZSL could do much with the Aquarium in the near future. In hindsight, it is a shame that the zoo chose to apply for lottery funding for the Snowdon (which could be refurbished on a much lower budget) rather than the Aquarium - for which there is no cheap or easy option.