Inside the newly renovated building, visitors will have a multi-sensory, immersive experience as they journey through naturalistic exhibits representing habitats of critical importance in the annual life cycles of migratory birds. Within the Tracking Station, visitors can get up close as staff conduct wild bird banding and demonstrate how they use satellite tracking to follow the movement of birds. A multimedia Migration Passageway will immerse visitors in a spectacle of rushing wings, providing a bird’s eye view of the world. In the first of three walk-through aviaries, visitors will learn about shorebird migration in the Delaware Bay Aviary. Along with birds like the red knot and ruddy turnstone, the aviary will feature horseshoe crabs, fish and invertebrates native to the Delaware Bay. Visitors will cross into the Prairie Pothole region of the northern Great Plains to view species of waterfowl while learning the importance of the wetlands. In the tropical Bird-Friendly Coffee Farm Aviary, guests will see the migratory Baltimore oriole or wood thrush and a resident flock of sunbittern. Songbirds will flit among coffee plants to represent a rustic coffee farm with the goal of inspiring the visitor to understand how native birds and agriculture can thrive together.
The outside yards on the Plateau will continue to feature charismatic favorites such as Caribbean flamingos, ratites, cranes and kori bustards from the Zoo’s current collection. In the outdoor Great Flight Aviary, North American birds with conservation success stories, such as the wild turkey and wood duck, will complement other resident birds and offer an opportunity to learn how to bird watch within a temperate forest typical of Washington, D.C.’s Rock Creek Park.