Pittsburgh Zoo
I did a full review of this last year so for now I’m sticking to a more basic overview on my thoughts.
Previously this place had two claims to fame: having northern elephant seals and being one of the most notable American zoos out of the AZA by choice. Well, the elephant seals are gone and now they’re… look I think “major zoo outside the AZA” was always too kind a descriptor for Pittsburgh. They’re a solidly middle-of-the-road zoo. Some elements are better than others, but none stand out much in either direction.
I’m going to split this into two parts, my thoughts on the zoo as it is and the master plan that was just released.
Pittsburgh Today
The most apt comparison zoo is John Ball Zoo in Grand Rapids. Both are located on hills in mid-size metropolitan areas. But I think John Ball understood the assignment better than Pittsburgh. They don’t have many truly massive animals, capping out at bongo and Siberian tigers. Pittsburgh often tries to be a conventional zoo with grazing or browsing megafauna on a plot of land that just isn’t built for it. The elephant, rhino, giraffe, and Nyala exhibits are all a little bit small. When combined with the adjacent cheetah and lion enclosures there’s probably room for maybe three or four really good exhibits in the space they’ve tried to put six. It’s
functional but it’s not great.
Other than the Africa area, though, I generally think the zoo does a solid job. The Islands and Jungle Odyssey make good use of the topography with small-ish, rarer species. The aquarium is probably the second best zoo aquarium I’ve seen, only dethroned last month by Omaha. The signage is terrible, though. The tropical forest building is outdated but most old zoos have an old building they regret. I really like the kids zoo and how it plays with the terrain. I even saw active beavers there this time. Water’s Edge also makes good use of the hill to have land, water’s surface, and underwater viewing areas naturally separated by switchbacks.
There are a few particularly regrettable exhibits. To me, these are the Komodo dragon (specifically the holding yard, which is the worst enclosure I’ve seen for the species), the leopard, the rhino, and the orangutan. All but one of these are phased out or get something new in the master plan.
The Master Plan
This is a genuinely satisfying zoo master plan that addresses many of the worst aspects while keeping… most of the good. No new Komodo space, but I have hopes they’ll get something in the new orangutan, clouded leopard, and flying fox complex.
The Africa overhaul is going to phase out the rhinos and expand the leopard exhibit while adding the smaller warthogs. The giraffe exhibit is apparently doubling and I’m frankly unsure where they’d even expand into. The cheetahs, probably, which is a shame as it’s a good exhibit for the cats and would still only be a perfectly fine exhibit for giraffes. Nothing for the elephants.
Demolishing the forest building is probably for the best but it does leave the zoo with less to do in the winters.
The orang complex sounds very interesting. If that’s not a misprint and the orangs have a full 40,000+ square foot enclosure with good verticality it might be the best for the species in North America. I think it’s probably referring to the full size of the complex, though, including other exhibits and guest areas.
I am kind of disappointed they’re moving meerkats and kangaroos from the kids area. I think the kids area is fantastic and could just have a rename to better draw adults in. The current macropod exhibit is fun because it shows how easily kangaroos can hop up the terraces. I also think moving the kangaroos into Africa takes away space in an area that’s already filled to the brim.
No word on the elephant seal replacement. The signage is still up and a lot of guests mistakenly identified the sea lions as elephant seals. I think they plan to get more, but that’s not really something they can reliably acquire. All up to the luck of the draw.
Entry village sounds fine. Is weird how long it takes to get to the zoo at present, but I kind of like the build up on the escalators.
The current islands area is kind of gutted by moving the clouded leopards and siamang. I assume that’s where they want to put Yellowstone, but it really isn’t big enough. I hope it goes in undeveloped land instead. Neither species would mind the hilly terrain.