I'm pretty sure the recently "renovated" exhibits for bobcats and anteaters were part of the WPA work that built the majority of the zoo in the 1930s. In the late 60s and70s I remember sun bears (!!!) in those tiny moated exhibits with weird concrete carvings. I don't think anything has lived there since the 70s until now.
The Tropical Building is about to undergo its 4th or 5th makeover since it opened in the 30s. Originally, it was a single glass fronted interior aviary that opened onto a very large outdoor aviary, site of the future Squirrel monkey exhibit. In the 1970s, a glass partition in the round opening connecting the indoor and outdoor aviaries was filled with opaque glass, and the interior glass barriers removed to make the indoor aviary a walk-through space, with the addition of planters in the former public gallery providing a very weak attempt at immersion.
In the 90s, the outdoor aviary was demolished, and the interior area modified again with small exhibits for caimans, turtles and anaconda added.
Maybe the next iteration will finally get it right.....
I remember seeing sun bears in there in the late 1980s, possibly even into the 1990s.
The rain forest building is perplexing as reduakari indicates; it seems to have been under continuous renovation for the last decade, seemingly closed more often than open.
Thanks for the updated review Geomorph. My visit to the SF Zoo in February gave me some hope that this zoo may be on a genuine pathway to renewal, but it sounds like they are just shuffling the deck chairs on the Titanic again with minor renovations of decaying exhibits, closure of their best exhibit (the genuinely great aye-aye experience), and building another in their series of endless playgrounds.
Where are all of the SF parents demanding a better zoo to take their kids to? Do they just go to the Oakland Zoo and/or Happy Hollow in San Jose instead?
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