Went to Taronga Zoo today....bit of a mixed review. Guy Cooper take note.
The recent torrential rain has left many exhibits a muddy mess.
Most of the zoo looking good but got the feeling today that maybe a little more thought could go into maintaining the new exhibits.
Creatures of the Wollemi looks run down. Mossy handrails. Reptile exhibits emptyish. The small bird component is lacking.
Backyard to Bush. Great concept. Just a shame it has never, to my way of thinking, reached its full potential. Not enough animals. Not enough roos in the walkthrough section. Barn half empty....
Wild Asia. Looks great. Elephant paddock is a bit bare in parts but the lower paddock is showing signs of recovery. And the palms which were dead have been removed and the remaining ones look good. Elephants having a fantastic time, utilising both the upper and lower exhibit. Binturong, langur, tapir, otters and fishing cats all on display. Pheasants magnificent. Need some finches or something in the palm aviary.
Dholes. Poor things. Theyve churned their second exhibit up something shocking and its all muddy now. Looks terrible.
Moore Park Aviary looks amazing. Shame the gibbon island, central seal pools, heritage aviaries and the bull elephant paddock look like ****.
African Waterhole. Where do I start? Make this the next priority. The bongo exhibit has never been the same since the breeding group left? Single male, always hiding.
Rhino paddock empty.
Safari Lodge area, which had been turned into a nice interp centre on zoo conservation. Subsequently destroyed by boisterous children. Needs either fixing or closing down.
Gorilla exhibit. Muddy. Mulch it or something for God's sake.
Sick of empty exhibits. The old tamarin exhibit. One tree shrew! Seeming as though you cant see the tamarins in Amazonia put some marmosets in there or something.
Food prices. Maybe my budget just got tighter, but since when did having to pay a ******** of money for ****** tasting food become OK. I know its A Sydney thing but its not worth it.
And finally. GREAT SOUTHERN OCEANS. Just to prove I dont love Taronga unconditionally.
Designers can get things right, in the main. Or they can get it wrong, in the main.
Wild Asia and Creatures of the Wollemi, on the whole are good developments. Give or take the size of the elephant paddock which I can look past because of the deep hole which will be the Elephant Breeding Facility.
B2B is an ongoing disappointment. Under utilised. And I feel GSO may be the same. $54 million!!!! For what??? There were some magical exhibits in the precinct, but overall, too many dead-zones, and fundamentally, empty of animals!!!!
Biggest development in the history of the zoo. I saw 3 seals, some penguins (more later) and 4 pelicans...............
Originally there were aviaires slated for the development. These fell by the wayside. But now, there is a massive 'heath area' void of animals and bypassed by visitors who choose a rustic bridge. Seal theatre looks amazing...Off show pool fanastic and quite innovative but on the whole this entire upper section is empty of animal life and quite a letdown.
The boardwalk section continues on. The path to nowhere. In one section near the pelicans it meets a staircase, neatly segmenting a whole section of garden which becomes, essentially, another dead zone.
The pelican display is really well done, but they are the only animals in the middle area. The walkway continues on to the rustic bridge which gives amazing views out over the exhibit itself, and onto the harbour. The bottom section is the only thing that saves this exhibit. The penguins are amazing, amazing amazing. But the whole submarine thing??????? Austere, under-interpreted and empty of animals. Where are the marine invertebrates? The fish? The weedy sea-dragons? Anything to give this area a bit of woomf! From the underwater viewing gallery the penguin shores exhibit continues. Great, except the penguins only use about a third of their enclosure.
The leopard seal pool is good. Nice and big. But this is where the exhibit gets tricky. You are promised underwater seal viewing. But where is it? You can jump on a fabulous lift and go back up to Wild Asia........or turn back as we did and go back in the submarine and stumble upon the leopard seal underwater area. This pool is good but I am slightly disappointed by it. Preliminary plans showed pools pierced by simulated bergs and rock crevices. But hardly any of this. Maybe if they put less money into fake star fish and limpet shells and more into actual exhibit features Id have been more impressed.
So overall, the biggest exhibit in the history of Taronga Zoo still raises the bar of marine mammal exhibitry immensely, but on the whole I wasnt overwhelmed, which I was expecting to be for this price tag.
$54 million has got NSW taxpayers 3 seal pools. A seal theatre. A penguin enclosure. And a pelican pool. 2.5 hectares of not much. The exhibit themselves are amazing but the whole thing could have been tied together so much more cleverly.
About the best thing to come out of it is the restoration of the Moore Park Aviary and Aquarium fascade. Still, the seal pools and penguin exhibits **** all over anything Ive ever seen
The recent torrential rain has left many exhibits a muddy mess.
Most of the zoo looking good but got the feeling today that maybe a little more thought could go into maintaining the new exhibits.
Creatures of the Wollemi looks run down. Mossy handrails. Reptile exhibits emptyish. The small bird component is lacking.
Backyard to Bush. Great concept. Just a shame it has never, to my way of thinking, reached its full potential. Not enough animals. Not enough roos in the walkthrough section. Barn half empty....
Wild Asia. Looks great. Elephant paddock is a bit bare in parts but the lower paddock is showing signs of recovery. And the palms which were dead have been removed and the remaining ones look good. Elephants having a fantastic time, utilising both the upper and lower exhibit. Binturong, langur, tapir, otters and fishing cats all on display. Pheasants magnificent. Need some finches or something in the palm aviary.
Dholes. Poor things. Theyve churned their second exhibit up something shocking and its all muddy now. Looks terrible.
Moore Park Aviary looks amazing. Shame the gibbon island, central seal pools, heritage aviaries and the bull elephant paddock look like ****.
African Waterhole. Where do I start? Make this the next priority. The bongo exhibit has never been the same since the breeding group left? Single male, always hiding.
Rhino paddock empty.
Safari Lodge area, which had been turned into a nice interp centre on zoo conservation. Subsequently destroyed by boisterous children. Needs either fixing or closing down.
Gorilla exhibit. Muddy. Mulch it or something for God's sake.
Sick of empty exhibits. The old tamarin exhibit. One tree shrew! Seeming as though you cant see the tamarins in Amazonia put some marmosets in there or something.
Food prices. Maybe my budget just got tighter, but since when did having to pay a ******** of money for ****** tasting food become OK. I know its A Sydney thing but its not worth it.
And finally. GREAT SOUTHERN OCEANS. Just to prove I dont love Taronga unconditionally.
Designers can get things right, in the main. Or they can get it wrong, in the main.
Wild Asia and Creatures of the Wollemi, on the whole are good developments. Give or take the size of the elephant paddock which I can look past because of the deep hole which will be the Elephant Breeding Facility.
B2B is an ongoing disappointment. Under utilised. And I feel GSO may be the same. $54 million!!!! For what??? There were some magical exhibits in the precinct, but overall, too many dead-zones, and fundamentally, empty of animals!!!!
Biggest development in the history of the zoo. I saw 3 seals, some penguins (more later) and 4 pelicans...............
Originally there were aviaires slated for the development. These fell by the wayside. But now, there is a massive 'heath area' void of animals and bypassed by visitors who choose a rustic bridge. Seal theatre looks amazing...Off show pool fanastic and quite innovative but on the whole this entire upper section is empty of animal life and quite a letdown.
The boardwalk section continues on. The path to nowhere. In one section near the pelicans it meets a staircase, neatly segmenting a whole section of garden which becomes, essentially, another dead zone.
The pelican display is really well done, but they are the only animals in the middle area. The walkway continues on to the rustic bridge which gives amazing views out over the exhibit itself, and onto the harbour. The bottom section is the only thing that saves this exhibit. The penguins are amazing, amazing amazing. But the whole submarine thing??????? Austere, under-interpreted and empty of animals. Where are the marine invertebrates? The fish? The weedy sea-dragons? Anything to give this area a bit of woomf! From the underwater viewing gallery the penguin shores exhibit continues. Great, except the penguins only use about a third of their enclosure.
The leopard seal pool is good. Nice and big. But this is where the exhibit gets tricky. You are promised underwater seal viewing. But where is it? You can jump on a fabulous lift and go back up to Wild Asia........or turn back as we did and go back in the submarine and stumble upon the leopard seal underwater area. This pool is good but I am slightly disappointed by it. Preliminary plans showed pools pierced by simulated bergs and rock crevices. But hardly any of this. Maybe if they put less money into fake star fish and limpet shells and more into actual exhibit features Id have been more impressed.
So overall, the biggest exhibit in the history of Taronga Zoo still raises the bar of marine mammal exhibitry immensely, but on the whole I wasnt overwhelmed, which I was expecting to be for this price tag.
$54 million has got NSW taxpayers 3 seal pools. A seal theatre. A penguin enclosure. And a pelican pool. 2.5 hectares of not much. The exhibit themselves are amazing but the whole thing could have been tied together so much more cleverly.
About the best thing to come out of it is the restoration of the Moore Park Aviary and Aquarium fascade. Still, the seal pools and penguin exhibits **** all over anything Ive ever seen