ZOO Antwerpen Zoo Antwerpen News 2025

Thank you @KevinB fish and chips is good with me, seems to be a staple at most UK zoos (have had this at ZSL London, Twycross, Edinburgh and Dudley that I can remember), will be interesting to try the Belgian offering!

Good to know about opening for the other restaurants, I'll be going midweek in off-season so the Savannah restaurant it'll have to be
 
Thank you @KevinB fish and chips is good with me, seems to be a staple at most UK zoos (have had this at ZSL London, Twycross, Edinburgh and Dudley that I can remember), will be interesting to try the Belgian offering!

Good to know about opening for the other restaurants, I'll be going midweek in off-season so the Savannah restaurant it'll have to be

If you on weekday you might even be able to get one of the tables with a view into the savanna aviary to eat.
 
The Savanne is nice. The zoo staff eat there, which is always a good sign. It was so hot when I was there in July that I just chose a nice brie & salad panini and a Magnum with cold drinks.
 
Thank you @KevinB fish and chips is good with me, seems to be a staple at most UK zoos (have had this at ZSL London, Twycross, Edinburgh and Dudley that I can remember), will be interesting to try the Belgian offering!

Good to know about opening for the other restaurants, I'll be going midweek in off-season so the Savannah restaurant it'll have to be

Forgot to add this: you have to order and pay hot dishes at the self service area checkout, they give you a ticket then you go to a separate counter to get you hot dish. Drinks, salads, sandwiches and desserts also have to be paid at the self service area checkout.
 
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Thanks for the further info @gentle lemur and @KevinB :) Sounds like the system they have at ZSL London now, make and pay for order then collect from a different counter, good to know that is how it works here too, to avoid getting confused in a new place
 
The zoo previous held one pure Reticulated, one pure Rothschild's, and one hybrid. The Reticulated died as you reported, so they will be left with one pure Rothschild's and one hybrid.

~Thylo
Unless you have more or more recent information, that is not correct. In the most recent studbook that can be found online (2011), all three are listed as hybrid/generic.

Buna's parents were a hybrid and a reticulated giraffe. She should be 93.75% reticulated giraffe and 6.25% Kordofan.

Ballysallagh's parents are a Rothschild's (now Nubian) and a hybrid. She should be 87.5% Rothschild's, 6.25% reticulated giraffe and 6.25% masai giraffe.

Clea's parents are a Rothschild's and a hybrid/generic. She should be 87.5% Rothschild's and 12.5% unknown/generic.
 
I can finally make another update:
Primates and such,..:
  • There are some works in the middle of the entrance area. ('Flamingoplein')
  • A transport box was in the Tree Kangaroo enclosure in the monkey house. Could just be for training as well.
  • New foraging ground has been added to multiple enclosures (Pygmy marmoset, Black-and Rufous Sengi,...)
  • Vizazi (the youngest Gorilla) is apparently almost old enough now, so that a silverback might be welcomed in the future.
Reptile House and Aquarium:
  • The hatchery has gotten some new hatchlings: 2 Weber's Sailfin Lizards, 2 Chinese Water Dragon, 1 Ocellated Lizard, New Guinea Tree Frog.
  • Some Oriental Fire-bellied Toads have been added to the Chinese Crocodile Lizard enclosure.
  • The former Giant Toad enclosure has been transformed into a large space for Yellow-banded Poison Dart Frog, Golfodulcean Poison Frog, Anthony's Poison-arrow Frog.
  • The terrarium for African Clawed Frog and Humphead was empty of animals.
  • Some Small Greater Madagascar Day Geckos have been added to the Radiated Tortoise enclosure. (with the existing large ones)
  • I saw two Spider Crabs in the schoolfish tank. (one next to the seahorses)
  • The renovation of the entrance to the aquarium is almost finished.
Bird house:
  • The Bird House has quite a big amount of mice again.
  • There was a Common Bronzewing in the Australia aviary inside.
  • A new bird is set to be introduced in the Asia inside aviary, I could not identify it.
  • The Palawan Peacock-pheasant enclosure got a new trush species, the Red-tailed Laughingtrush.
I hope that was everything that needed updating.
 
Can the elephants use the new part of the enclosure that was added a year or two ago?
 
Can the elephants use the new part of the enclosure that was added a year or two ago?

They can and do use the new area. Sometimes the outdoor exhibit is divided to separate the two young bulls and only one of them has access to the new area.
 
Are the Nutria still at Antwerp? Does anyone have a picture of their signage? I couldn't see one in the photo album.
I have only just now discovered they are not little beavers while going through a photo album of 2007 and wanting to label them correctly ... *facepalm*
 
Are the Nutria still at Antwerp? Does anyone have a picture of their signage? I couldn't see one in the photo album.
I have only just now discovered they are not little beavers while going through a photo album of 2007 and wanting to label them correctly ... *facepalm*

They still have a few, although I don't know exactly how many they have left. I don't think I have a photo of the signage unfortunately, I couldn't locate one during a quick look in my archive.
 
They still have a few, although I don't know exactly how many they have left. I don't think I have a photo of the signage unfortunately, I couldn't locate one during a quick look in my archive.

Thanks! I've had a Google too and nothing to be found.
 
Thanks! I've had a Google too and nothing to be found.

On a closer look I did find one from 2021. I think it is identical to or very similar to the current signage, minus the sign for a wild fox (long since removed) that was in the zoo at the time, due to which the nutrias were temporarily in what at the time was still the hippo house. The species signage itself would be identical or very similar.
 

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On a closer look I did find one from 2021. I think it is identical to or very similar to the current signage, minus the sign for a wild fox (long since removed) that was in the zoo at the time, due to which the nutrias were temporarily in what at the time was still the hippo house. The species signage itself would be identical or very similar.

Amazing thanks! Oh I wasn't that far off then thinking they were beavers, as I'm sure I would have read "Beverrat" at the time.
 
Have been back from Belgium for a few days now, still need to sort out my many, many photos!

I went to the zoo on Tuesday, and can happily say it's a great zoo! Despite being smaller than ZSL London, it felt like it really packed a lot more into it's space. I was there from opening to closing, so 10am-6pm. Assumed there would be time, as it is smaller than London, to do a loop and then have time for some revisits to some areas, but as it was one loop took nearly the entire day, with the Bird House having to be a bit of a rush to see before it closed.

Seeing Amahoro was truly special. I knew she would be bigger than the Western Lowland Gorillas I'm used to seeing, but I wasn't expecting her to be so black in comparison with the other gorillas. A very special animal

Also managed to see my other target species for the day, the Black and Rufous Sengi (though not a great view), the Markhor (which did a little headbutting just to make the visit extra memorable), Okapi, Collared Pratincoles (think only one female that came outside), Owl-Faced Monkeys, Scaly-sided Mergansers, Nutria. Bongos and Dik-Dik were no-shows, but they're not uncommon in the UK.

Was very pleased to see Sam, the young bull elephant originally from Whipsnade. Have never seen young bull elephants interacting before, so to see two getting bolshy with each other was quite the sight, though Max (originally from Prague) did throw a large stick over his back, which headed towards us visitors, thankfully it fell a little short and hit the railings instead.

It was interesting to compare this zoo with London, which is only 20 years older and also has numerous historic buildings. I feels like Antwerp have got a better handle on how to use and repurpose their older buildings than London, with much less dead and wasted space. Am not usually an aquarium person, but the one here was nice and airy feeling, with the large tank at the end providing a nice focal point; made me miss London's now-closed aquarium, even though it was very dark in comparison, and not nearly as inviting a-space as the Antwerp one.

The Giraffe/Elephant house is truly something that needs to be seen to be believed! And having an elephant silently come through a door into one of the inside pens, and suddenly be 'there' so close was very special

I liked the monkey house, though wasn't so sure about the replica Benin Bronzes on the walls of the the enclosure currently housing the Spider Monkeys.

The bird house was rushed as it was the end of the day, so likely missed some species. Am not sure how I feel about keeping birds in vivaria (namely the small glass-fronted enclosures on the left side), though it was interesting seeing the old 'dark corridor' enclosures that now hold the museum specimens, can only imagine what that area was like when it still held birds.

The indoor Sub-Antarctic Penguin exhibit did feel a bit small, but of the few exhibits of this type I've seen I don't think any have felt roomy. Same with the elephant and Rhino enclosures, it's a little surprising to find both such large species in a small city zoo, but for a few youngsters who will presumably move on after a few years once they reach maturity, the spaces are probably fine for temporary holdings.

I did get chance to pop back to see Amahoro outside at the very end of the day, without anyone else around.

All in all, a great zoo, and one I hope to return to again some day, especially if they are going to redevelop the stretch next to the train station, with maybe a nice new nocturnal house to replace Nocturama?

(The rest of Antwerp was also wonderful, and deserves a return trip too, there was too much to do on such a short trip!)
 
Thanks for your review @Crowthorne and when I visited several years ago a real highlight for me was the Reptile House, which of course runs continuously with the Aquarium. I counted more than 40 terrariums and circa 70 species of herps in above-average exhibits.

Does anyone know what the status of the Jubilee Complex is? I saw Coatis, Raccoons, Squirrel Monkeys, Red Pandas and Andean Bears there in 2019, plus Jaguars and Amur Leopards nearby in old cages, and a fantastic Nocturnal House called the 'Nocturama'. Literally none of that is on the current online map of the zoo, and wasn't the huge renovation job of that area supposed to have been completed by now?
 
Thanks for your review @Crowthorne and when I visited several years ago a real highlight for me was the Reptile House, which of course runs continuously with the Aquarium. I counted more than 40 terrariums and circa 70 species of herps in above-average exhibits.

Does anyone know what the status of the Jubilee Complex is? I saw Coatis, Raccoons, Squirrel Monkeys, Red Pandas and Andean Bears there in 2019, plus Jaguars and Amur Leopards nearby in old cages, and a fantastic Nocturnal House called the 'Nocturama'. Literally none of that is on the current online map of the zoo, and wasn't the huge renovation job of that area supposed to have been completed by now?

The jubilee complex has been entirely demolished, with only a few large protected trees and some concrete structures that will be preserved remaining. Most of the ground currently just sits empty and screened off. I recently noticed that the "temporary" walkway and playground have been in place so long they have had to start replacing some of the wood.

The project first suffered major delays due to the covid crisis, then it was delayed several times more as they had to rethink the plans for animal housing standards, heritage and financial reasons (among others current prices of construction materials and cost of certain building choices). The last time they communicated about it (earlier this year) they said they still intend to finish the new complex by late 2027.

The last I heard about it was some recent information posted at the Laafsekikkers, which says they have further scaled the project down by scrapping the Amur tigers (which would be a good thing). Currently the plans seem to be snow leopards, spectacled bears and spider monkeys, small South american monkeys, red pandas and an aquatic area (possibly jellyfish, possibly more extensive) - although this perhaps isn't totally official.

It will only remain to be seen when they actually start building and what they will actually build. I really hope this will start finally building things up again on this site as soon as possible. But personally I don't really see them completing anything by late 2027 - I just really hope the silence and inactivity will cease in 2026.

The thread at Laafsekikkers also mentioned that in a recent keeper talk they mentioned the upcoming arrival of a new silverback gorilla.
 
One more little thing I've just remembered, I thought it was very interesting that on the roof behind the bee-eaters there was a beehive, which allowed the bee-eaters to hunt for their own food. I'm assuming this was a deliberate choice by the zoo, rather than a coincidence?
 
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