I choose the site of the demolished Myrtle Square Mall in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. It is 48 acres 20 minutes from the airport and basically a stone's throw from the beach. I intend to propose a family-oriented oasis in the form of a reputable zoo that tastfully displays a diverse array of species
Welcome Plaza
This open plaza, paved with permeable pavement, welcomes visitors to this family-oriented zoo. A gift shop, restaurant, and information center serve guest needs here. In the middle of it all is an impressive fountain featuring the likenesses of black bear, bison, wolf, bald eagle, and humpback whale There are exhibits for some native South Carolina wildlife: nine-banded armadillo, bobcat, gopher tortoises, and bald eagle. Just down the righthand path from the plaza a dedicated exhibit for black bears. Just off the lefthand path from the plaza is a dedicated exhibit for adult American alligators.
Giraffe House
This serves as the zoo's Africa section. The marquee attractions are a herd of Masai giraffes and a pair of okapis. The okapis are mixed with red river hogs and marabou storks. The giraffes are mixed with southern ground hornbills, plains zebras, and impala. There are also dedicated exhibits for lions and spotted hyenas. Each species has a lush exhibit with plenty of foraging and privacy opportunities. For a fee, visitors can feed giraffes and have close-up encounters with okapi. There is a guest restaurant with a large outdoor plaza overlooking the giraffe exhibit. The yards are adjacent to a large building that serves as both their nighthouse and indoor viewing for them and for smaller animals from the African savannahs and forests. Dedicated exhibits inside exhibit for meerkats, naked mole rats, African rock python, dwarf crocodile, gaboon viper, leopard tortoise, black mamba, puff adder, Diana monkeys, aardvarks, and white-throated bee eaters. The giraffe section of the barn has free-flying sacred ibis, red-bellied parrots, Fischer's lovebirds, and Egyptian vultures. The okapi section has free-flying gray parrots, helmeted guineafowl, and rose-ringed parakeets.
Reptile House
This reptile house has several sections made in the interest of portraying a meaningful display of the diverse species and ways of living of the world's reptiles and amphibians. Some invertebrates also call this building home.
Grand Canyon
Home to animals native to the Grand Canyon National Park in the United States. It is home to bark scorpions, tarantula hawk wasps, Arizona blond tarantulas, Northern leopard frogs, woodhouse toads, red-spotted toads, canyon tree frogs, gopher snake, collared lizards, common chuckwallas, desert tortoises, prairie rattlesnake, banded rock rattlesnake, twin-spotted rattlesnake, and gila monsters.
Critical Condition
Home to some of the most endangered herptile species. Chinese alligators, Panamanian golden frogs Burmese star tortoises, Roti Island snake-necked turtles, Aruba Island rattlesnakes, Santa Catalina Island rattlesnakes, Grand Cayman iguanas, wild-type axolotls, goliath frogs, Wyoming toads, and spotted turtles.
Alien Invasion
Dedicated to herptiles and fish who have become invasive species somewhere on Earth. Nile monitor, Burmese python, cane toad, Cuban tree frog, Yemeni chameleon, domestic goldfish, snakehead trout, Asian carp, zebra mussel, and red lionfish.
Backyard Wildlife
Herptiles native to South Carolina. Baby American alligators, gopher tortoise, copperhead, timber rattlesnake, eastern diamondback rattlesnake, eastern box turtle, eastern garter snake, corn snake, rat snake, green anole, northern cricket frogs, eastern spadefoot toads, Fowler's toad, eastern glass lizard, common snapping turtle, and tiger salamanders.
Amazing adaptations
Surinam toads (birthing through back), alligator snapping turtle (fishing lure in mouth), tomato frog (poison), blue-tongued skink, poison dart frogs (bright colors repelling predators), gharials (long snout for catching fish), and frilled lizard (loose neck skin that splays out when frightened)
Island Hopping
Dedicated to the unique fauna endemic to certain island habitats.
Guam
An aviary for Guam rails and Guam kingfishers. There is also a terrarium for brown tree snakes- the snake species responsible for the birds' endangerment- embedded in a faux rock formation.
Malaysia
Malayan tapirs, agile gibbons, Malayan tigers, binturong, striated herons, and Indian muntjac
Australia
A walkthrough exhibit (meshed over to keep birds inside) with Bennet's wallabies, short-beaked echidnas, budgerigars, and cockatiels. Inside are also dedicated exhibits for emus and dromedary camels through which guests cannot walk. At the end of it is an indoor section with dedicated exhibits for koala, tiger snake, funnel-web spider, fierce snake, bearded dragon, freshwater crocodiles, southern hairy-nosed wombats, and lace monitor. Exit through gift shop.