Cleveland Metroparks Zoo Review of Cleveland Metroparks Zoo

geomorph

Well-Known Member
15+ year member
Cleveland Metroparks Zoo is located in a slightly hilly area a few miles from downtown but mostly feels like it is worlds away from the derelict industrial structures that surround the city. It is a zoo composed of areas which are distinctly seperate from each other, in fact it feels like several small zoos located close together, and this fact makes exploring the property an adventure. The most unfortunate aspects of its layout are that one of the areas of the zoo is a seperately gated attraction surrounded by the parking lot, and a massive arched bridge that carries a city street soars over part of the property and ruins the atmosphere. Currently, that bridge is being rebuilt, so visitors must take a tram through the construction site to reach the area on the other side. I imagine that when the bridge is finished, traffic noise from above will still be an annoyance for the exhibits closest to it. The zoo is reached by road in a small wooded valley which gives way to parking lots dotted with trees that lead to the ticket plaza, and then across a parking lot lane to the ordinary undetailed turnstile shed which is surrounded by an administration and education building that matches the gift shop and rentals building on the other.


The area of the zoo which is located outside of the main gate is the Rainforest. It is a seperate gated attraction, but is covered with zoo admission. Although it is surrounded by the parking lot, it is also surrounded by a landscape buffer of berms covered with trees and a curved entry path and small plaza, so it is a nice entry experience. The building is large and features glazed walls with a series of stepped half and quarter curves at the top. After entering, it is very architectural and feels like a hotel lobby in its front section, which is several stories tall and features the majority of the living plants. Glazed walls give way to Mayan-like ruins from which a giant waterfall drops and several small primate enclosures emerge. There is also a restaurant and small gift shop in this entry atrium area. The bottom floor of the main exhibit is mostly an extensive collection of standard reptile and amphibian enclosures arranged around a dark gallery room with minimal theming. Highlights include a large crocodile enclosure with underwater viewing, a tunnel with windows into the lower floor of a two-story monkey exhibit which is better viewed from the second floor, and a really creepy dark open habitat for chevrotains in the middle of the room which features a mist system which creates a low fog and stops occasionally to clear and provide a view of the little deer-like critters! The second floor is the more open themed and skylit part of the main exhibit space and is entered by a themed rainforest education tent. Rocky enclosures for giant anteaters, capybaras, clouded leopard, asian otters, silvered leaf monkeys, and others are mostly small to midsized, skylit, and well-themed and presented, and an orangutan enclosure occupies the space beneath a glass dome with rocks and a large climbing tree, although the space is limited. Live plants in the exhibits are a bit sparse but not distractingly so. Overall it is a nice immersive experience, not equal to Lied Jungle or Jungleworld, but my favorite part of the zoo.

After entering the main part of the zoo, the Welcome Plaza is the junction point for further exploration and is surrounded by the entrance buildings, the tip of Elephant Crossing which is under construction and promises to be a great addition to the African Savanna which is adjacent, and an African themed food court and cafe whose dining terrace overlooks one of the African Savanna exhibits. The African Savanna is a pleasant but ordinary collection of several nice open enclosures reached by curving paths with occasional wood timber shelter lookouts, the largest of which is an enclosure with giraffe, zebra, and ostrich with too many visible fences and steel railings. The best is a large enclosure with bontebok and crowned cranes that adjoins the cafe. An average African lion exhibit of grass and a little outcrop of rock is backed by a tall flat straight wall of timbers. The most themed area is the Rising Waters Safari Camp, composed of several outdoor areas around an African pavilion. Adjoining this are two buildings, one of which is the nice Center for Zoological Medicine that features interior displays and glazed viewing of operating and care rooms. The other is the rhino house, with interior views of the bedrooms for the black rhino yard adjacent which is average, backed by wood fencing. Scattered around the periphery of African Savanna are several exhibits which are unrelated and unimpressive but do not detract from the overall theme. These include a small leopard house and exhibit, next to a historic rocky monkey island, and an ordinary pair of greenhouses with a temporary butterfly display. Adjacent to the African Savanna is an area that could be considered the other part of this central part of the zoo, Waterfowl Lake. It is a verdant landscape of woods and islands with abundant birds on a large curving lake, partly traversed by a boardwalk and surrounded by paths and a peaked historic building called Wade Hall housing an ice cream shop. The islands feature several primates, lucky fellows compared to most of the zoo's primates. A few medium netted flight cages feature Andean condors and bald eagles on one end. Overall, this central area is pleasant, unhurried, roomy, and ultimately, forgettable.

The next area of the zoo is the one that is seperated from the rest by the overhead bridge. Right now it is reached by a tram, but normally it would be reached by a path running under the bridge. It also features a smaller seperate entrance to the zoo that adjoins one of the Metroparks that ring the city. This area is called Northern Trek, is backed by a thickly wooded hillside, and was mostly built at the same time (1960's?) and partially updated with more woodsy theming and a great newer exhibit. The core of the area is a complete circle of rocky grottoes, surrounded by several large hoofstock yards walled with matching low rock, two more grottoes, a pinniped pool, and a small cafecalled Grin N Bear Eats. This is a great area for getting your bear fix! Most of the grottoes are for bears and they are mostly roomy and open in comparison to some of the dark steep walled exhibits of the same time. The center circle has Amur tigers in addition to sun, sloth, spectacled, and black bears, and all have earth substrate. The two other exhibits are bigger but only had concrete substrate, with grizzly and polar. The polar bear exhibit did feature open views over the valley from the top of its exhibit which was nice, and a central rocky plinth that gives visitors a very close open view of the bears when the bears climb it. The pinniped pool is a small architectural pit that is the weakest part of the area. The three hoofstock yards for Bactrian camels, reindeer, and white-lipped deer are roomy and shaded and remind me of Saint Louis Zoos excellent mid-century Red Rocks hoofstock area. The cafe building has a high pitched square roof that matches the indoor houses for the hoofstock. The newer update to the area in addition to some entry theming is Wolf Wilderness, an excellent themed complex for several species at the far end of Northern Trek. The exhibits are entered through a rustic lodge with a large central themed education room, with a side room that has a large glazed viewing area into the large wooded gray wolf exhibit. The lodge is then exited, and several exhibits surround an outdoor sheltered breezeway, with a small bald eagle aviary and an open streambank exhibit for Blandings turtle with underwater viewing on one side, and a roomy beaver pool and den on the other which is open to the wolf exhibit behind it. Then the visitor goes back through a smaller wood lodge and another wolf view to exit this fine small complex that really augments Northern Trek.

Another seperate area reached from the Welcome Plaza is the second best area of the zoo and is very complete and well-themed. Surprisingly, it is the childrens zoo, called Australian Adventure. It strikes the right balance of theming and education and animal exhibits while being a place that both adults and children can enjoy, without being too junky or syrupy or bright. A train circles the extensive grounds, and the first features are a building called Gumleaf Hideout with several interior skylit koala habitats and a small exterior yard, and a gift shop called In The Pouch Gifts with a nice small lorikeet feeding aviary behind. Then a charming train station and misting water tower adjoin the entrance to the rest of the exhibits, a roomy open walkthrough habitat for kangaroos and wallabies called Wallaby Walkabout. This leads to a themed Australian homestead building with a video and animal robotics presentation about the continent, and then a cafe, petting barn and yard, sheep ranch, small show amphitheater, camel ride, playground, picnic pavilions, emu and singing dog exhibits, and finally a fantastic treehouse filled with cavelike exhibits for reptiles and bats as well as a slide and lookout called Yagga Tree.

Yet another seperate area of the zoo is located up a hill from this and reached by a switchbacking deck through the woods or a tram, and is the weakest part of the zoo, the Primate Cat and Aquatics Building. Other than a few average outdoor yards, the exhibits are mostly viewed inside an ordinary (1970's?) building that is loosely divided into geographic zones for the primates and cats, and a gallery of average small wall aquariums in a row. The primate and cat exhibits are fronted by sloping glass, and divided by concrete walls, often with mesh backdrops, and filled with some minimal fallen logs and toys and ropes. I didn't spend much time in here but it appeared to be a fairly extensive collection cooped up in a subpar facility. Adjacent is another cafe and a rather standard parklike clearing with little excitement.

Despite shortcomings, this zoo is pleasant and is worth the 10 dollar adult general admission, in fact it is underpriced by 2 dollars for the extent of its collection and facilities. I have been to 45 zoos, and I rank Cleveland Metroparks Zoo at number 28, just behind Oregon Zoo and just above Honolulu Zoo. None of the zoos exhibit complexes make my top 50 list, although both the Rainforest and the Australian Adventure are nearly there. None of the zoos individual exhibits make my top lists either. However, any zoo fan going to Cleveland should not skip this facility! I have posted many pictures in the gallery.
 
My home zoo, that I am extremely familiar with, so I am undoubtedly biased with how much I love the zoo. Once our elephant complex opens up, the African Savanna section will be much more complete. The elephant exhibit will have a strong African theme with excellent habitats for elephants surrounding the village. The two main exhibit yards will be 1 acre each. With a smaller night yard not visible to guests. The yards are going to have lots of grass, trees, and mud, along with two enormous pools so they should be great for the elephants. For the visitors there will be a glass viewing area which should be pretty exciting. The exhibit is scheduled to open in June 2011, so if any of you want to see the zoo, I would schedule your visit after the new exhibit opens.

If you saw the rhino exhibit with the three females out in the main yard I guarantee you would have enjoyed it a lot more. Our three female rhinos are extremely active and playful and use the pool a lot. They are really fun to watch and I have had the pleasure to work that area for a few days. One of our females may be pregnant although it is not confirmed yet. We have a really good breeding program, and our one female Inge has given birth to three female calves in the past 9 years, and as I said before there may be another one on the way.

I am glad you enjoyed the RainForest exhibit. The Orangutans are my favorite part of it, and sometimes I have stayed and watched them for an hour. Did you see the lower part of the Clouded Leopard exhibit with the plantings and substrate? Our ocelots are really difficult to find, and of all the times I have been in the Rainforest I have only seen them twice!

Great review and thanks for posting all the pictures!
 
I really like the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo. I would like to add that the zoo is accessible by Cleveland's excellent public transportation. I took a bus from downtown. So, I walked from the bus stop down the hill thru the parking lot to the entrance. Inside the zoo, I walked everywhere. My favorites are the Australia section, rhinos and wolves. The zig zag walk down from the gorillas is lovely and refreshing. The construction turned me around and I walked around the reindeer exhibit 3X! The food was a disappointment. It was the exact same food we have at Lincoln Park Zoo. I thought Cleveland made their own ice cream? I was looking forward to having some at the zoo!

*Cleveland is a great weekend destination. All of their sports teams are located downtown, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Museum is downtown, their theater district w/ 4 or 5 theaters are downtown and Cleveland is becoming a foodie destination as well w/ the Iron Man chef on 4th street. I go to Cleveland for their zoo and the RRHFM and the other stuff is icing on the cake!

**2nd add -- Cleveland also has docents! Saw 5 during my day long visit there and stopped to talk w/ one. No docent at the wolf exhibit, unfortunately.
 
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@geomorph: Very informative and comprehensive review! There are many great zoos across North America, and I've never heard of anyone rating the Cleveland Zoo as one of the 20 best, and so your 28th place position sounds appropriate. I've never visited Cleveland, as I chose Columbus, Toledo and Cincinnati in the State of Ohio when I made my epic zoo trip in the summer of 2008. Maybe next time I'm in the area?
 
@geomorph: Very informative and comprehensive review! There are many great zoos across North America, and I've never heard of anyone rating the Cleveland Zoo as one of the 20 best, and so your 28th place position sounds appropriate. I've never visited Cleveland, as I chose Columbus, Toledo and Cincinnati in the State of Ohio when I made my epic zoo trip in the summer of 2008. Maybe next time I'm in the area?

Cleveland is my #2 zoo after the Bronx. When the new elephant exhibit opens up I think it could make a top 20 list for those like you.
 
@BlackRhino: that's awesome that the Cleveland Zoo is #2 for you, and since you actually live in Cleveland then that is great that you enjoy your local zoo. I know that after one looks at San Diego, Bronx, Omaha, Columbus, Woodland Park, San Diego WAP, Detroit, Miami, Oklahoma, ASDM, Minnesota, Denver, Disney's Animal Kingdom, Cincinnati, Brookfield, Sedgwick County, St. Louis, North Carolina, National and Phoenix then there are 20 great zoos off of the top of my head. Add in Fort Worth, Dallas, Memphis, Oregon, Jacksonville, Atlanta, Toledo, Kansas City, Audubon and Indianapolis and all of a sudden there are 30 decent American zoos. I could go on all day, and thus a zoo like Cleveland has some stiff competition.:) We shoud be thankful for that!
 
Everyone seems to forget about Dallas. With a 10 acre Giants of the Savanna opening in the Spring, 25 acre Wilds of Africa, and top 5 tiger and otter exhibits this zoo could easily sneak its way into almost anyone's top 10. They will probably be the best zoo to see African animals, which are often considered the most important in a zoo.
 
Cleveland is my #2 zoo after the Bronx. When the new elephant exhibit opens up I think it could make a top 20 list for those like you.

I'm confused, I know you've been to SD, SDWAP, and Miami, are you saying Cleveland is better?
 
I'm confused, I know you've been to SD, SDWAP, and Miami, are you saying Cleveland is better?

Miami is NOT THAT good. They have a great aviary, but I am just about into birds as most Americans are into zoos. Amazon & Beyond is the biggest waste of money with no wow exhibits. The rest of the zoo is basically identical. It's not that great of a zoo, and I don't even think it could make a top 20 list. Yes, you heard me, I like my home Cleveland Zoo better than SD and SDWAP. Am I being biased? Absolutely to a certain degree, however at least we have a few great exhibits like are Wolf Wilderness, Australian Adventure, and to some extent our RainForest. Not to mention an awesome, entertaining group of breeding rhinos. In less than 2 years we will have the best elephant exhibit in the Midwest. That to me is a great zoo. To some extent I am being biased, but Cleveland does have some great, exhibits.
 
Very intersting since you not long ago greatly praised the three zoos I just mentioned.

I've never been to Cleveland, but it's hard to imagine it being as good as the ones I mentioned based on what I've heard and read.
 
Miami is NOT THAT good. They have a great aviary, but I am just about into birds as most Americans are into zoos. Amazon & Beyond is the biggest waste of money with no wow exhibits. The rest of the zoo is basically identical. It's not that great of a zoo, and I don't even think it could make a top 20 list. Yes, you heard me, I like my home Cleveland Zoo better than SD and SDWAP. Am I being biased? Absolutely to a certain degree, however at least we have a few great exhibits like are Wolf Wilderness, Australian Adventure, and to some extent our RainForest. Not to mention an awesome, entertaining group of breeding rhinos. In less than 2 years we will have the best elephant exhibit in the Midwest. That to me is a great zoo. To some extent I am being biased, but Cleveland does have some great, exhibits.

BlackRhino:

"Overall I really like Amazon & Beyond and it has some great exhibits for jaguars, giant otters, anteaters, crocodiles, etc. I'll be visiting MetroZoo next week and I hope the foliage will be more full than my last visit."

It seems like you have greatly re-evaluated your position on zoos/exhibits of late, why is that?

This isn't mean to be a negative post, hope you don't take it that way.
 
BlackRhino:

"Overall I really like Amazon & Beyond and it has some great exhibits for jaguars, giant otters, anteaters, crocodiles, etc. I'll be visiting MetroZoo next week and I hope the foliage will be more full than my last visit."

It seems like you have greatly re-evaluated your position on zoos/exhibits of late, why is that?

This isn't mean to be a negative post, hope you don't take it that way.

Yes, I have re-evaluated my position on zoos. I have come to the conclusion that for a zoo to be great, it must have a wow exhibit that is brilliant on many different levels. I value the visitor experience more too, as anyone can fence off 6 acres of land and claim it the best exhibit for that animal, but it takes a lot of effort to make an exhibit that is best for the animal and meaningful for the visitor. Exhibits that accomplish both are those like Congo Gorilla Forest, Arctic Ring of Life, Cleveland's Wolf Wilderness, Nashville's African Savanna, SDWAP's Lion Camp, Seattle's Jaguar Cove, etc. I also find aesthetics more important which is why I am no longer that fond of Elephant Odyssey, although it is still a nice home for the elephants.
 
@BlackRhino I do seem to notice that you seem to really like the Dallas Zoo. I for one am glad to hear it.
 
Yes, I have re-evaluated my position on zoos. I have come to the conclusion that for a zoo to be great, it must have a wow exhibit that is brilliant on many different levels. I value the visitor experience more too, as anyone can fence off 6 acres of land and claim it the best exhibit for that animal, but it takes a lot of effort to make an exhibit that is best for the animal and meaningful for the visitor. Exhibits that accomplish both are those like Congo Gorilla Forest, Arctic Ring of Life, Cleveland's Wolf Wilderness, Nashville's African Savanna, SDWAP's Lion Camp, Seattle's Jaguar Cove, etc. I also find aesthetics more important which is why I am no longer that fond of Elephant Odyssey, although it is still a nice home for the elephants.

I think that's an odd way to judge a zoo as I've explained elsewhere, but no need to annoy you anymore with those comments. So Wolf Wilderness is better than anything at SD?
 
Any other zoos on this trip of yours geomorph?

Is your zoo rankings listed anywhere on here?

Thanks for the reviews/pics/and exhibit ranking lists!
 
mweb08, yes my zoo rankings are in the thread called 'Your Top 10 Zoos' in the general discussion section. On this recent trip I went to Cleveland Metroparks, Columbus, Cincinnati, and Newport Aquarium, and I have posted reviews and pictures for all four. I also went to Indianapolis, Saint Louis, and Kansas City on the same trip, and plan to post reviews and photos for those soon, probably next week. I'll give you a preview by saying that Indianapolis is my number 22 rank, Saint Louis is my number 11 rank, and Kansas City is my number 23 rank.
 
Looking forward to your St. Louis review, Geomorph, because I also went there! I was there 4th of July.
 
I forgot to mention that the back shore of the Waterfowl Lake had a special exhibit of mechanical dinosaurs when I was there, but I did not pay the extra admission to see it. Anyone have an opinion about this kind of exhibit? I know the San Diego Wild Animal Park had a similar one this past summer as well as past years.
 
When I visited Cleveland Metroparks Zoo Labor Day weekend, I was asked if I wanted to see the dinosaur exhibit. I said I'd rather see live animals. The admissions person smiled.
 
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