The master plan was presented to the Riverside Board of Trustees a few days ago. Some new details and graphics were revealed during the presentation:
-Site plan for Southwest Australian Provinces shown at 9:55. It's noted that Australia may be completed before Gateway to Africa.
-Site plan for Pacific Coasts of the Americas shown at 10:18.
-Concept art for the revitalized Bear Grottos shown at 11:13, depicting sun bear and red panda exhibits.
-Site Plan for Conservation Campus shown at 13:26.
-At 15:53, it's noted that additional small-scale projects (agile initiatives) will roll out between major developments. This presumably will include the prairie dog and eagle owl exhibits discussed previously.
-New five-year strategic plan will be released in February.
Decent video. A lot of the explanation is stuff we already know but the site plans and new concept art look great.
I also appreciated the slide highlighting the importance of bringing back elephants and community demand. I know there's a lot of cynicism to that aspect of the plan and I'm glad they are framing it as responding to demand. I also notice they actually stated outright the new exhibit will be a mixed-species elephant habitat!
It's hard to see the Bear Grotto art well but it looks to me less like populating the existing grottos and using the existing rockwork as a backdrop to construct new habitats. This is a smart route as it could allow more space for the bears, better views for guests and if they reduce the species numbers, the existing grottos could be reduced to three or four larger spaces instead of the five current.
The Conservation Campus site plan impressed me, too. The paths leading to the hospital's public viewing will be new and constitute some southern expansion to the park visitor-wise and I think letting visitors in on the zoo's conservation work is very smart!
Something I was hoping to get was an explanation of the penguin habitat. I understand this is an outdoor netted aviary, but I'm trying to figure out the significance of the "winter viewing" label on the layout. Any ideas?
It's tempting to suggest some more ambitious ideas, but I hope it simply indicates intent to keep an indoor exhibit available for the penguins and seabirds for the winter. It would be cool if they could include some satellite exhibits like the Living Coast has had over the years, and keep a penguin encounter room. I'm still a big believer in dual indoor/outdoor access so I hope they intend to keep that in this and some of their other ideas.
One detail I found interesting about the Australia plan is that there will be two aviaries for kookaburra. Seems like an odd species choice to designate two exhibits for. It would be far more appropriate to give duel aviaries to the birds-of-paradise so they can demonstrate proper lekking behavior. Otherwise this plan looks terrific and may be the most holistic Australian exhibit anywhere in the western world.
I wonder if the zoo will begin tearing up the entire Northwest quadrant all at once considering how interlinked everything is currently and then gradually reopen it in phases. They'll need to empty the macropod yards so that Africa can be expanded into that space, so it makes sense to do Australia first and then follow that up with Gateway to Africa which I'm assuming will be a two phase project. My hope is it'll look something like this
2027/2028: Australia
2028/2029: Gateway to Africa Phase I (Savanna/Pachyderm House)
2029/2030: Gateway to Africa Phase II (Forest)
Slightly optimistic timeline, but you get the idea. That would be followed up the Pacific Coasts and the new North Entrance which I speculate will be done in tandem with one another. Could definitely envision that being a fitting centennial project.
There used to be a room in the Living Coast that had viewing windows looking into the penguin burrows connected to the main exhibit; perhaps it may be something like that? Could also be a new penguin encounter room.
Good point about birds of paradise! I hadn't considered that.
I definitely agree it seems logical to close most of the Northwest and work on as much of it at once as possible, particularly Australia and the first phase of Africa. The integration between the Savanna/Pachyderm House/Australia is all pretty intensive and it would be hard to have paths weaving between and around those areas (separately) during construction. I do think there would be some time to leave The Forest open as there looks to be sufficient pathing to the present separating it from other construction; even if work were being done on the new pygmy hippopotamus/bongo exhibits and the early stages of the elephant and rhino expansions, I think the path north from Tropical Forests could still lead to the current loop without being infringed by work unless changes were made to the existing building or loop, which could be a much shorter phase of construction.
I think your timeline is pretty solid for openings!
By indoor habitat building to remain does that mean the echidnas will be staying there? If there are any species currently indoor that will be outdoors in the future could that mean their enclosures will get used by other species?
I don't think any species held indoors would be moved outdoors fully. The wombats getting outdoor access was discussed on either this or a previous master plan but I am a bit unsure they would remove their indoor viewing entirely, especially when they previously had a lot of breeding success in an indoor, nocturnal setting. I can't see the echidna being moved outside or their current enclosures being altered much - best case scenario is the current echidna/kookaburra exhibit is altered and echidna are limited to the nocturnal room again.
I assume anywhere it says "indoor building to remain" they mean essentially untouched at this stage of planning, although we'll see. I could see the Habitat Africa Forest building being altered if they intend to build Bongo and Pygmy Hippopotamus barns so close to the existing structure, and I am personally a big fan of dual indoor and outdoor access for species.
This I truly wonder too. Some species like the bats, wombats, and other species can work fine indoors. The former Kookaburra room could be given to a galah or other Australian bird.
I'm definitely curious what will happen to that space!
It's curious how the aviary lineup will evolve. I wonder if they may do some mixed species work there. They once mixed several Australian finches successfully, and I know Indianapolis has multiple cockatoo mixed in their Kangaroo Crossing walkthrough. Could be cool to see a couple mixed cockatoo here -- plus the zoo has a long history with Australian birds.
Late to the party but I wonder why the indoor koala holding isn't connected/viewable to the main building like the tasmanian devil holding is?
Maybe the Koala can use an underground tunnel between habitats? (Probably not likely but I recall believing of a setup like this as a child.) It's a good question.