Kakapo are now living in Invercargill and the public can visit the rare parrots for $2 a ticket.
The Department of Conservation is opening its kakapo hand rearing facility to the public on Sunday.
The public will be able to see up to 10 young kakapo chicks who have been hand raised.
Public viewing sessions will be held between 10am and 2pm for all weekends in May, with tickets available for $2 from the Invercargill i-site.
The temporary facility was set up in Esk St west, opposite the Menzies building in the Invercargill CBD, with the help of Department of Corrections community workers.
DOC senior ranger kakapo Jo Ledington said vulnerable kakapo chicks hatched during this year's breeding season were being hand-reared at the site.
"There are 123 kakapo left in the world and we're trying to make every one survive."
Of that number, 58 per cent came from hand reared birds, Ledington said.
For the last few years the kakapo recovery team used a warehouse in Invercargill with plastic walls to house the hand rearing unit, but this year they were kicked out and needed to find a new home, Ledington said
The Invercargill City Council came along and offered a building in the CBD for the kakapo team to use, she said.
The team just wanted a facility where they could show the work they had put into the kakapo recovery effort, Ledington said.
It was not their dream facility, but it was a nice step along the way, she said.
"The dream is a purpose built facility."
There are 10 chicks in the facility, half will be sent back to their homes in the middle of May and the other half will be sent in early June, she said.
In May last year, the Invercargill City Council shelved plans to open the world's only kakapo chick-rearing unit .
Councillors at a meeting in November 2014 agreed to provide $425,000 for the unit, which was to be part of a $1.98 million combined kakapo and tuatara attraction on the north side of the Southland Museum and Art Gallery.
During the meeting in May 2015 when the idea was canned, several councillors expressed concerns at the lack of scientific evidence to prove kakapo would survive in captivity, increasing uncertainty around the total cost of developing the proposed site, and whether the site would be appropriate after the museum was redeveloped.