Recently in the thread about Europe's 100 must see exhibits there was some talk about exhibits, exhibit complexes or animal houses that no longer exist, were notable and/or popular and are missed, and that maybe there should be a thread to discuss and reminisce about those.
I have now decided to start that nostalgic thread. I am not going to put forth any specific guidelines and will give pretty free rein to anyone participating. I do think however that at least a small amount of discussion about the exhibit(s) and if possible some images should be included.
Personally I will start this thread with two submissions: Zoo Antwerpen's Nocturama and Rotterdam Zoo/Diergaarde Blijdorp's meadow/migratory bird aviaries.
I have photos of those exhibits I have taken myself, but very few if any currently posted to the gallery, so for now I will be choosing photos others have posted. I do plan to one day add some of my own photos of these exhibits to the gallery.
Zoo Antwerpen - Nocturama
The Nocturama at Antwerp was part of the Jubilee complex, built in the late 1960's for the zoo's 125-year anniversary. This complex consisted of predator (cat and bear) exhibits on the ground floor, a Nocturama or nocturnal house on the first floor, raptor and owl aviaries on the roof/top floor and a dolphinarium on the first and top floors (later home to California sea lions). The Jubilee complex closed to visitors for renovation and was emptied of animals in late 2019. Unfortunately the planned renovation was halted in its very early stages by the Covid-19 pandemic and to my knowledge still hasn't restarted. It was however already announced in 2019 that the Nocturama would be closed and would not be part of the renovation. Most, if not all of the former inhabitants have since left the zoo.
I only grew to appreciate Antwerp's Nocturama, and in fact the very concept of nocturnal houses, in the last years of its existence. Antwerp's Nocturama was of decent size with fairly decent exhibits with some nice landscaping and held quite a nice collection with species from different continents and habitats, including mouse deer, slender loris, aardvark, springhare, tamandua, two-toed sloth, douroucouli, armadillo and Egyptian fruit bat. The original 1969 Nocturama had a lot of small exhibits with burrows visitors could view into. In the mid 2000's it was revamped with much larger mixed exhibits themed to continents and habitats (i.e. African savanna, South American forest). Some of the exhibits were renovated in later years, and an exhibit for pouched rats with a display on rats being trained to search for landmines was later added next to the entrance of the Nocturama.
Antwerp's Nocturama had its main entrance next to the sea lion underwater viewing area and an exit between the tiger (later coati and young spectacled bear) terrace and the Amur leopard cage. Next to the old lion terrace (later raccoon/skunk exhibit) was a secondary staircase entrance.
Personally I think the loss of the Nocturama as a concept and an animal house and of several of the species that were housed in it are a real loss to Zoo Antwerpen. Unfortunately given the tendency to require outdoor exhibits for larger mammal species and that the nocturnal house concept seems to be very much going out of fashion in zoos in general I don't see much of a chance for nocturnal exhibits to return to Antwerp. But personally I would love to see the Nocturama either to be renovated after all, or for the small monkey house to (partially) become a nocturnal house with some of the previously kept species, or other species.
Aardvark and springhare exhibit
By @lintworm
South American exhibit
By @lintworm
Visitor area
By @Hippo
Australian golden-bellied water-rat exibit
By @Toddy
Egyptian fruit bat cave (The bats could also acccess the South American exhibit)
By @Toddy
For more images see the Search results for Nocturama in the Zoo Antwerpen category.
Diergaarde Blijdorp/Rotterdam Zoo - Meadow bird/Migratory bird aviaries
These set of two aviaries, with the indoor bird housing set in an adjacent greenhouse, existed relatively briefly. The aviaries opened in 2007 and closed in 2014. The area was then repurposed into an African aviary with okapis and African birds. There were two aviaries, one with native Dutch meadow type birds such as avocets, lapwings and ducks and one with a more Mediterranean theme housing Southern European and migratory birds such as bee-eaters.
Personally I really liked these aviaries and the native and European collections are something that I generally find underrepresented in zoos. Something like or at the scale of the aviaries at Rotterdam I have not yet seen at other zoos. I really liked the aviaries and while I love Rotterdam's current okapi indoor exhibits in the greenhouse, the current African outdoor aviary just doesn't do it for me, and the okapi paddocks are adequate but not great.
Dutch meadow birds
By @Toddy
By @Maguari
By @korhoen
By @orycteropus
Mediterranean/Migratory bird side
By @orycteropus (Comments include species list)
Unfortunately I couldn't find images showing more of the Mediterranean part in the galley.
I am looking forward to what exhibits you guys will bring to the table in terms of zoo and exhibit nostalgia!
I have now decided to start that nostalgic thread. I am not going to put forth any specific guidelines and will give pretty free rein to anyone participating. I do think however that at least a small amount of discussion about the exhibit(s) and if possible some images should be included.
Personally I will start this thread with two submissions: Zoo Antwerpen's Nocturama and Rotterdam Zoo/Diergaarde Blijdorp's meadow/migratory bird aviaries.
I have photos of those exhibits I have taken myself, but very few if any currently posted to the gallery, so for now I will be choosing photos others have posted. I do plan to one day add some of my own photos of these exhibits to the gallery.
Zoo Antwerpen - Nocturama
The Nocturama at Antwerp was part of the Jubilee complex, built in the late 1960's for the zoo's 125-year anniversary. This complex consisted of predator (cat and bear) exhibits on the ground floor, a Nocturama or nocturnal house on the first floor, raptor and owl aviaries on the roof/top floor and a dolphinarium on the first and top floors (later home to California sea lions). The Jubilee complex closed to visitors for renovation and was emptied of animals in late 2019. Unfortunately the planned renovation was halted in its very early stages by the Covid-19 pandemic and to my knowledge still hasn't restarted. It was however already announced in 2019 that the Nocturama would be closed and would not be part of the renovation. Most, if not all of the former inhabitants have since left the zoo.
I only grew to appreciate Antwerp's Nocturama, and in fact the very concept of nocturnal houses, in the last years of its existence. Antwerp's Nocturama was of decent size with fairly decent exhibits with some nice landscaping and held quite a nice collection with species from different continents and habitats, including mouse deer, slender loris, aardvark, springhare, tamandua, two-toed sloth, douroucouli, armadillo and Egyptian fruit bat. The original 1969 Nocturama had a lot of small exhibits with burrows visitors could view into. In the mid 2000's it was revamped with much larger mixed exhibits themed to continents and habitats (i.e. African savanna, South American forest). Some of the exhibits were renovated in later years, and an exhibit for pouched rats with a display on rats being trained to search for landmines was later added next to the entrance of the Nocturama.
Antwerp's Nocturama had its main entrance next to the sea lion underwater viewing area and an exit between the tiger (later coati and young spectacled bear) terrace and the Amur leopard cage. Next to the old lion terrace (later raccoon/skunk exhibit) was a secondary staircase entrance.
Personally I think the loss of the Nocturama as a concept and an animal house and of several of the species that were housed in it are a real loss to Zoo Antwerpen. Unfortunately given the tendency to require outdoor exhibits for larger mammal species and that the nocturnal house concept seems to be very much going out of fashion in zoos in general I don't see much of a chance for nocturnal exhibits to return to Antwerp. But personally I would love to see the Nocturama either to be renovated after all, or for the small monkey house to (partially) become a nocturnal house with some of the previously kept species, or other species.
Aardvark and springhare exhibit
By @lintworm
South American exhibit
By @lintworm
Visitor area
By @Hippo
Australian golden-bellied water-rat exibit
By @Toddy
Egyptian fruit bat cave (The bats could also acccess the South American exhibit)
By @Toddy
For more images see the Search results for Nocturama in the Zoo Antwerpen category.
Diergaarde Blijdorp/Rotterdam Zoo - Meadow bird/Migratory bird aviaries
These set of two aviaries, with the indoor bird housing set in an adjacent greenhouse, existed relatively briefly. The aviaries opened in 2007 and closed in 2014. The area was then repurposed into an African aviary with okapis and African birds. There were two aviaries, one with native Dutch meadow type birds such as avocets, lapwings and ducks and one with a more Mediterranean theme housing Southern European and migratory birds such as bee-eaters.
Personally I really liked these aviaries and the native and European collections are something that I generally find underrepresented in zoos. Something like or at the scale of the aviaries at Rotterdam I have not yet seen at other zoos. I really liked the aviaries and while I love Rotterdam's current okapi indoor exhibits in the greenhouse, the current African outdoor aviary just doesn't do it for me, and the okapi paddocks are adequate but not great.
Dutch meadow birds
By @Toddy
By @Maguari
By @korhoen
By @orycteropus
Mediterranean/Migratory bird side
By @orycteropus (Comments include species list)
Unfortunately I couldn't find images showing more of the Mediterranean part in the galley.
I am looking forward to what exhibits you guys will bring to the table in terms of zoo and exhibit nostalgia!