AmbikaFan
Well-Known Member
Well, even not-for-profits must make ends meet, and earned income provides a big chunk of that. Investment in a sea lion exhibit or performance area is like money in the bank, which can then be used to fund some conservationally-important-but-ho-hum-to-most exhibits on Invertebrates. Doing the Nutcracker for a month each year makes a full year's worth of more experimental and cutting edge work possible.
The zoos who are making upgrades every five years or so are keeping themselves relevant, by creating better ways to exhibit and by reminding locals that the zoo is still there and to make a visit. I've never been to Henry Oorly
Half of my message disappeared when I was called away. I'll try to recreate it later. Sorry
To continue my lost message:. I think there are several factors at play here, several situations. NZP had three huge projects, because there had been three decades of deferred maintenance. Once the first assessment was done of the Zoo's physical plant, the AustralIA pavilion had to be demolished the next day, it was so structurally unsound. The best buildings in the zoo, built 20 years earlier--received grades of D. With the Bird House, things should all be at least safe. This is called, "coming from behind," hence sudden new spending.
Some zoos like SDZ and Columbus maintain a very clean, generically pleasant, manicured look,. Even the Wilds looks manicured! Peopleh used to think of zoos as rough-and tumble, somewhat wild places, but I think we've become so used to this look in amusement parks, arenas, even malls, that it's subconsciously made us expect it everywhere. Now Columbus's latest project is a sheer money earner, a cash cow, but there's been a concerted effort to make everything look clean, fresh, and new.
We may not realize we expect this, but look what happens when we don't get it? How many ZooChatters have called the Bronx Zoo "tired" or "rough around the edges" after a visit? Despite some excellent exhibits, age and deferred maintenance have set in here too. For a long time. Behind-the-scene quarters on The Zoo look pretty shoddy compared to Columbus, SD, Georgia Aquarium, and Chester. Renovations of historic buildings like the Reptile House have huge exterior ducting and unsightly things you'd never see at another premiere. The Bronx Zoo IS scraggly and unmanicured,. The vast majority of funds it gets goes into ex situ conservation, which while admirable and way it probably should be in the best of all possible worlds, but it leaves things at home looking pretty ratty. And when it starts to look ratty, you can be sure that attention is also not being paid to what people can't see--what's behind the scenes, what's behind the walls. Deferred maintenance is going to hit the Bronx in a big way someday--seen in decreased attendance or maybe AZA reports---and the costs will be big. With even Times Square now sleek and modern, the Bronx Zoo isn't going to be able to be rough around the edges forever. Like NZP, a bureaucracy that operates by crisis management will probably step in to save the day--or the conservation budget will have to be tapped. A terrible but inevitable day.
I've forgotten many examples I had made, but I think "sleeker" expectations and facilities lapsing into years of deferred maintenance could also be causes for this trend in pricy exhibits.
One way to look at these big projects positively is that government doesn't float tax issues or approve a 1/4 mil tax to function some new exhibit unless the zoo has become a very integral part of the city's social fabric and many people are affected by it, as guests and workers. Once they make the investment, people are reminded to go more often to see the "new" just as amusement park nerds come out for the season's new ride. Zoos have made it to the big time and are expected to impress us aesthetically and with technology to spread their message effectively.