Lincoln Park Zoo’s Primate House is an exhibit I wish had some renovations. I feel like the primate exhibits in the building are lackluster and don’t give the primates there a lot of room, especially compared to the exhibits of the macaques, gorillas and chimps. Granted, those are bigger primates, but still.
The renovations at my local zoo were a huge improvement, but they were not satisfactory enough to me.
The Cerrado is alright to me.
I wish they moved their capuchins elsewhere and in their place expanded the orangutan/macaque exhibit. The other primate isles are ok, so is the petting zoo.
The whole carnivore corridor could be demolished so they could open space for a future elephant herd. The same works for the old tiger enclosure. The otter exhibit, on the other hand, is great.
The lion exhibit is bad, though not bad enough to be called awful. However, it'd be much better suited for a lion if they removed the platform once used by red-faced spider monkeys and gave the lion some more open space. Maybe, instead of demolishing the old tiger exhibit, the male lion could alternate between the two.
As for the Burle Marx Gardens, they are alright except for the cassowary pen, which is way too small. If I were the director, I would build a house for animals native to New Guinea, as the zoo has had a long history with a few species native to the island. The reptile village is fine as well.
The king vultures should be replaced with Lear's macaws. The enclosure could also get an expansion so the parrots would have more space. The small herp house is fine and so is the walkthrough aviary.
The "Savanna" is home to a single African ungulate, which is the Barbary sheep. The other two hoofstock are a few female Javan rusa and a breeding herd of blackbuck. I wish they improved the roster and moved the sheep to their old cliffside exhibit.
The islands in this area are home to peafowl, which means this whole zone of the zoo is a zoogeographic mess.
The hippos live in a nearby enclosure, which I believe is way too small for them. Maybe moving them back to their old enclosure (of course, after a renovation) would improve their situation.