Adventure Aquarium My Adventure Aquarium Review

blospz

Well-Known Member
15+ year member
Adventure Aquarium is in Camden, NJ with a beautiful view of the Philadelphia Skyline across the review. I haven't been to a lot of aquariums, but I would say it's small to average sized. Some exhibits were geared more towards childen with the exhibit design having a cartoon style look, but it's a place that people of all ages can enjoy.

Zone D: When you enter the aquarium, you go up the escalator which leads you to the main food court. You can either go straight ahead to Zone A, B, & C or cut through the food court on your left to go to Zone D. When you first enter this zone, you're brought to African section, featuring Feather Ridge and Hippos. You see the land area of the hippos exhibit when you first walk in and if you veer off to your right to can either climb stairs to a platform to get an overview of the exhibit, or you can stay on the ground level and get multiple views of the hippos. Granted that the hippos do not have outside access, I thought it was a pretty nice exhibit for them. Their pool was larger than I expected as when I went down to the lower level to see them underwater, it was almost impossible as they were far back in the pool. One of them eventually did come over, which was the main reason I went to this aquarium. I have not been to a zoo yet that has a hippo underwater viewing so this was a treat to see these big creatures majestically move underwater. There are set of rocks on the left of the viewing window that are the perfect height to allow a hippo to slightly raise its head to come surface and breathe. An African crested porcupine was on land and some birds in the area were cattle egret, blue bellied rollers, and a few more exotic birds I cannot remember.

When you leave this area you are enter Jules Verne Gallery. This is a dimly lit section that features sea nettles, moon jellies, sea dragons, lobsters, among other sea creatures. The lamps are shaped like jellyfish and there are creatures drawn on the wall playing on the name of some sea creatures. An example would be a sea cow displaying a cow's head on a fish like body. Also in this section is your first window to view the sharks. This goes directly into Shark Realm where you pass another large viewing window before going into their underwater tunnel. This part of the exhibit was dampered for me and my group as school groups were very obnoxious. It's amazing how oblivious chaperones are these days and what these kids get away with. They were screaming, running, climbing off rails and trying to jump off steps. My partner got so fed up he screamed really loud, "Stop running!" That is when their chaperone decided to do her job and told them to knock it off. After this, you can go up a ramp that leads to a second floor where you see closer to the surface. On the way there are some interactive things, such as a cage to go into with a video of a shark bumping into you. This area ends up leads in the aquarium's only gift shop.

Zone C: On the second floor, half of this area (Rainforest Rendezvous) was closed off for a new children's section coming next year. However they still had a touch tank where you could touch starfish, sea cucumbers, and anemones. The aquarium is know for being the most touchable aquarium with many hands on stations.

Zone B: The area at furthest into the aquarium, you have Stingray Beach Club, and outdoor exhibits, Seal Shores and Penguin Island. Stingray Beach Club has the cartoon design I was talking about and a pool area where guests can touch and feed the rays. One nice thing about all the touch stations is that the animals get a 15 minute break each hour where no one is allowed to touch them. Although I would hate to be that employee on a busy summer day who has to repeatedly tell guest, "The rays are on break, you can touch them in 10 minutes..." Outside the seal and penguin exhibits were both small in size for its inhabitants. Six seals in a fairly small pool with a bank area for their trainers to interact with them. The African Black Footed Penguins have a small shore area and multiple holes to access into their indoor area. Also a small pool area, which none of the penguins felt like swimming in on the day I went. The design was similar to that of Columbus Zoo and Seneca Park Zoo (before it's renovation).

Zone A: The area that made me the most relaxed! It was also the last area I went to and all the school groups had left. Ocean Realm has a huge tank that has sea turtles, fish, and a variety of sharks and rays. The first viewing area is a huge window. If you turn the corner then you have circle and pop in bubbles to get a closer look inside the tank. Going around the corner again to the back of the tank, you had a very tall viewing window with small movie theater seating and relaxing music. I could stay there all day. After this was Carribean currents with many small terrariums. I would like to tell you all of the fish I saw, but I honestly don't remember. Ones that stick out are of course the color fish you'd see in Finding Nemo, eels, cowfish, sea horses, lobsters, crabs, etc. The area ended with the viewing area of the newest resident, Mighty Mike. A very huge alligator in a long, shallow pool and opportunities for visitors to get up close to view him.

Despite the noise at the beginning, I had a more pleasant time here then when I went to the National Aquarium. Granted it was also due to going to the National Aquarium in the summer and not being able to view many areas due to the higher traffic of people. I enjoyed Adventure Aquarium with have bigger viewing areas, touch stations, and of course underwater viewing of hippos. If you were ever in Philadelphia for a few days, I would recommend stopping here along with the zoo.
 
Thanks for the review, and Adventure Aquarium is a facility that I would love to visit in the next couple of years. I appreciate all of your reports and keep up the great work!
 
Excellent review. I visited this aquarium a few years back and thought it was very well done for its size. It seems that would be true. One question though. Did they still have the guitarfish and great hammerheads in the Ocean Realm tank?
 
Yes, they had both. Thank you for naming the animals. I'm all about focusing on the animals that I'm horrible at reading signs and remembering what they are.
 
I enjoyed this review. I remember when this aquarium first opened its theme was something like "Fish of New Jersey" and it didn't have any tropical animals or penguins. Apparently the theme bombed and they subsequently added hippos, penguins, tropical sea life, etc. It sounds like a very nice aquarium. I'm glad that you got to see hippos underwater. It does present them in a completely different light than just seeing them from above and they can become much more dynamic animals to watch when they lilt around.
 
Here's some history of the aquarium from Wikipedia. The reviewers of the early aquarium quoted sound like snowleopard ("fish prison" and "worthy of demolition")...are you sure that you weren't reviewing this aquarium 20 years ago snowleopard?

"The original building was designed by the architectural firm The Hillier Group, and became a gleaming centerpiece for a dull and virtually abandoned area. Constructed primarily of cast concrete, accented by large glass and aluminum facades and topped by a large, white fabric dome, the Aquarium was completed by early 1992, with a total cost of about $52 million. It opened on February 29, 1992.
In its first year of operation, the Aquarium hosted 1.6 million visitors. But trouble arose almost immediately when visitor and critics' reviews turned decidedly negative and scores began to express great disappointment in their grand new museum. Some reviewers went as far as to call the Aquarium a "prison for fish", worthy of "immediate demolition".
The building's concrete nature was glaringly apparent both inside and out, as bare, grey concrete walls defined almost every public space. The cavernous rotunda, capped by the classic white dome, featured a deafening echo and was poorly lit. None of the exhibits were themed, and many of the tanks seemed to be lined up in neat, square rows. Graphics were almost non-existent, and the building itself tended to feel small. But the death knell came by way of the animals themselves — as a New Jersey–based operation, the original Aquarium displayed only native fishes, normally brown and grey in color, and just about nothing else. By the next fiscal year (1993), attendance had plummeted to a mere 400,000. Alarmed, the Aquarium's managers began a short period of intense renovation, just a year after opening day. This was featured on Michael Moore's television series TV Nation in 1995."
 
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