Zoo of the Future: A Photographic Gallery of Innovation in Zoological Gardens of the World

Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle, together with Bronx, Minnesota, Zürich and Frankfurt zoos is known for having several perennially good exhibits. One is this grizzly exhibit in the Living Northwest Trail, which contains a stream and an underwater view. The composition is as carefully done as in Hagenbeck, but the center of the visitors view is a lowered stream, not the higher rocks. It opened in 1994, so is only 30 years old, but will likely stand the test of time. Other good exhibits at the Woodland Park Zoo include the gorilla habitat and the jaguar habitat.
Woodland Park's innovative and ground-breaking gorilla habitat is even older- opened in 1975, or 49 years ago.

1. Space. Expectations how much space should be dedicated to animals grow and grow. Good exhibits were always spacious for their time.
And this, I feel, is the real key. If one designs an exhibit with the intent of meeting current day standards, it will almost certainly need to be demolished or repurposed in 10-20 years, if not even less. Good zoos should never strive to meet minimum standards, and instead strive for the best practices and/or ideal exhibits, which are much less likely to fall behind the times as quickly, if at all.

I also think zoos need to be much more willing to re-purpose older exhibits for other species as needed. If a zoo has a gorilla exhibit that's too small for gorillas based on our modern understandings, but is otherwise excellent, why not replace the gorillas with mandrills? If a zoo has some solid big cat exhibits that are too small, why not combine two of the habitats to make a larger habitat for one of the species? Given it is no longer as easy to acquire new animals as it once was, zoo exhibits should be designed with flexibility in mind anyways, and just because an exhibit can no longer serve its original purpose doesn't mean there isn't still value in keeping it.
 
29. What makes a timeless zoo exhibit?
Everlasting exhibits which remained good for decades

full

Photo: @Animal

When making this thread, I noticed that some exhibits are already decades old but remained good. Others did not age well. Here are some perennially good exhibits which have been popular among generations of visitors

The African panorama at Tierpark Hagenbeck is actually the first ever exhibit built in modern times with naturalism in mind. It is 117 years old. It opened in 1907 and in 1997 has been declared a monument by the Hamburg city council. It combines four different exhibits - a flamingo pond, a hoofstock paddock which recently holds plains zebra and ostrich, an exhibit of lions and tall rocky pinnacles. They are separated by hidden fences. There is also a concealed path to watch the lions up close.

By modern standards of animal care, the lion exhibit is much too small and flamingos should not be kept flightless. But the panorama is still attractive, still makes a good impression. I wonder how the zoo will solve the problem of space for the lions.

These exhibits ostensibly only replicate a nature for an amusement attraction, but I would argue it is art, and often a high quality one. At least one zoo historian claims the same. Why art? They evoke a sense of beauty. They are not random pieces of habitat, but ones chosen and distilled to create a tiny landscape, using many of the classic art principles of perspective, composition and so on. And their non-triviality and high quality is proven by that tens of zoos and city parks tried the same, but failed to achieve a similar effect.

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Photo: @AnaheimZoo
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Photo: @Gomphothere

African Plains at Bronx Zoo are 84 years old, having opened on May 1, 1941. Like in Hamburg, they show savanna animals separated by hidden moats. But it is a much larger area of meadows, clumps of trees and some low rocks, with several enclosures for lions, African ungulates and birds. The interest of the zoo director Osborn was to show relationships in nature. So lions and nyala appear to share the same space to illustrate the ecological relations between predators and prey, not only because it looks cool.

In the following decades, Bronx Zoo employed a team of architects and used similar principles. The result is a whole palette of very good exhibits - World of Birds, Asian plains, African highlands for gelada and Nubian ibex, Himalayan highlands, Jungle World and Congo Gorilla Forest. Although some individual enclosures are too small or lack outdoor access, they remain interesting and attractive decades later. And will likely be enjoyed in future by new generations of zoo visitors, until their structural material physically breaks down.

Good zoo landscaping uses the same principles as good landscape architecture. They have been known for centuries. Designers of English country residences developed panoramic views in a similar way as modern zoos, including the use of hidden moats, which in Britain are called haha.

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Photo: @Philipine eagle

Classical Gardens of Suzhou created in the 11th-19th centuries in China and this otter exhibit in Zürich Zoo both use the same methods to construct a little self-contained landscape in a small space, and to restrict and direct the view of a visitor.

This enclosure for Eurasian otters in is about 54 years old, having been built about 1969 / 1970.* But if not for the rather heavy concrete front wall, one might not notice its age. There is sufficient space, an underwater view, a look into the otters sleeping den, and the landscaping of boulders and native plants resembling a Swiss river. Wild otters sadly disappeared in Switzerland decades ago and did not come back until now.

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Photo: @Maguari

Grzimek House in Frankfurt Zoo is 45 years old. It opened in 1978 and remains one of the best buildings for small mammals worldwide. While few exhibits had to change from larger to smaller mammals, they hold remarkably well.

Much of the charm are well constructed small indoor landscapes. In the night section, they include a bat cave with stalactites and a night savanna for aardvarks. In the day section, there is, among others, a rocky landscape for hyrax and a jungle enclosure for agoutis and marmosets. A visitor sees it immediately after entering, and when leaving the building, one realizes he looks at it again but at the treetop level.

full

Photo: @geomorph

Penguin Encounter at the SeaWorld San Diego
is 40 years old, having opened in 1983. It is completely artificial and in a commercial theme park. But it remains very interesting, penguins breed there, and one might not notice its age if not for the style of short educational films played on the TV screens.

There are the only emperor penguins in the Western world, a moving walkway in front of the 30 m viewing window and a gallery to sit and watch penguins for a longer time. There is a split underwater and above water view, real ice spread daily on the floor, a backdrop of rocks and a painted mural and an Antarctic light cycle which makes the exhibit appear gloomy on photos taken in summer. Plus a smaller but similar exhibit of Northern puffins, murres and ducks.

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Photo: @snowleopard

Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle, together with Bronx, Minnesota, Zürich and Frankfurt zoos is known for having several perennially good exhibits. One is this grizzly exhibit in the Living Northwest Trail, which contains a stream and an underwater view. The composition is as carefully done as in Hagenbeck, but the center of the visitors view is a lowered stream, not the higher rocks. It opened in 1994, so is only 30 years old, but will likely stand the test of time. Other good exhibits at the Woodland Park Zoo include the gorilla habitat and the jaguar habitat.

So what it takes to make an timeless zoo exhibit, which will remain good for tens of years? I suggest the following characteristics:

1. Space. Expectations how much space should be dedicated to animals grow and grow. Good exhibits were always spacious for their time.

2. Theming is kept subtle. Rocks, if they are appropriate for the animals, are very realistic and not too overdone. Good exhibits contain much greenery, unless they represent a naturally barren habitat.

3. Using the classic principles of landscape architecture, especially composition - from the sides to the center showpiece. If there is something in the background behind the exhibit, it is hidden from view by rocks, trees or similar.

4. Buildings and man-made elements are hidden or maximally discreet and unobtrusive. Fashions in architecture change over time. At best, visitors will simply recognize 'it is so 2020s' and at worse they simply say it is obsolete. A creation which today is most fashionable and cutting edge will be outdated in 20 years.

5. There should be no cultural theming. Hundreds of zoos for over a hundred years built hundreds of cultural artifacts: exotic temples, huts, pagodas, ruins, totem poles and whatever. Most of them have been demolished long ago already, and virtually none was remarkable. There is a saying natura artis magistra or nature is the master of arts, and it seems to be at work. Time mercilessly eliminates cultural theming from zoos.

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Photo: @twilighter

And for the contrast - Lubetkin Penguin Pool at the London Zoo. It opened in 1934 and is 25 years younger than the panorama at Hamburg. It managed something exceptional - zoologists at ZSL could not find an animal which could live in it comfortably. Currently it stands empty, and worse, it is a Grade I listed historical building. It seems that London historians and architects care about the unusual but not about aesthetics nor utility.

*It was difficult to track the precise age of old zoo exhibits from the pre-internet era, and the age is approximate.

On ZSL as a related topic I would highlight Lady Yule's walk at Whipsnade. Constructed in the 1930's it remains a good space for brown bears on the one side and a highlight wolverine enclosure on the other. As a natural space making use of the landscape, trees etc it was pioneering in it's time and many of it's features are still great today. It follows the principles highlighted in your post. I realise UK zoos are usually not included in the list of merit exhibits but that one is worth a look in this context in my view.

It's quite a generalisation though to say London historians and architects care nothing for aesthetics and utility. In a city of millions of people with hundreds of thousands of buildings it's difficult to draw a conclusion about a population or a profession based on the design and preservation of a penguin pool.
 
I hope that with more awareness zoos will at least somewhat rethink their cultural theming. Most of the cultural theming can be described as tasteless but harmless in my opinion and I am not aware of any major backlash yet (but I haven't searched for it either). So I am not afraid that it will be rebuild or desintegrate in a few years or even decades. But I think it is likely we will see more of "authentic" cultural theming that looks somewhat more realistic and is done with the origin in mind.

I am aware of both Woodland Park Zoo (Seattle) and Zürich Zoo receiving criticism for the replica of African villages in their savannah areas, with WPZ recently removing those buildings alltogether.
 
I have registered some backlash to cultural theming around elephant enclosure at Prague zoo. I saw some twitter accounts of Indian tourists being angry about something in their pics but I never understood what exactly is the problem.

It is most probably related to elephant-headed Ganesh, who in India is still a commonly worshipped deity.
How do we feel about local (Central European) historical noble estates with their gardens littered with more or less badly done copies of Chinese pavilions, Swiss mountain cottages, Italian grottos, Dutch houses, Roman aquaducts, Greek temples, kolibas, Turkish minarets, or fake gothic castle ruins?

I agree with you that whole human culture is about borrowing, twisting and adopting from other cultures. Other cultures do the same with Western culture. For example, in China it is a tradition to put stylized lion statues on the sides of the house doors. Now these statues are sometimes Mufasa from the Disney cartoon.

However, of these European copies of exotic architecture, only very few examples which are especially good were preserved. In a zoo, I remember the Damascene pavillon at Wilhelma Zoo, which is actually older than the zoo.

On ZSL as a related topic I would highlight Lady Yule's walk at Whipsnade.

Hmm, Whipsnade would be a topic of its own - parks and reserves which are good but are mostly areas of meadow or wood.

It's quite a generalisation though to say London historians and architects care nothing for aesthetics and utility.

I think in the case of Lubetkin penguin pool, everybody criticizes it strongly, even the architects daughter. As a zoo exhibit which is unsuitable for any animals is something extreme, rather like a residential building without the entrance door.
 
It is most probably related to elephant-headed Ganesh, who in India is still a commonly worshipped deity.


I agree with you that whole human culture is about borrowing, twisting and adopting from other cultures. Other cultures do the same with Western culture. For example, in China it is a tradition to put stylized lion statues on the sides of the house doors. Now these statues are sometimes Mufasa from the Disney cartoon.

However, of these European copies of exotic architecture, only very few examples which are especially good were preserved. In a zoo, I remember the Damascene pavillon at Wilhelma Zoo, which is actually older than the zoo.



Hmm, Whipsnade would be a topic of its own - parks and reserves which are good but are mostly areas of meadow or wood.



I think in the case of Lubetkin penguin pool, everybody criticizes it strongly, even the architects daughter. As a zoo exhibit which is unsuitable for any animals is something extreme, rather like a residential building without the entrance door.

Oh I agree it's a demonstrably hideous exhibit with no real applcation for animals, it is grim! It just isn't representative of London as a city.

Whipsnade is a very good example of using the natural landscape and making some good enclosures with it, many have stood the test of time.
 
30. Nabire, Dvur Kralove Zoo and Suci, Cincinnati Zoo

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Photo: @Maguari

I made a special trip to Czechia to see Nabire, the last northern white rhino in a zoo. I was just in time - Nabire died a few months later in 2015. Currently, there are only two northern white rhinos on Earth - elderly females moved from Czechia to the Ol Pejeta sanctuary in Kenya. There are also several frozen embryos, egg cells, and sperm samples, which give a glimmer of hope that the subspecies might be resurrected from the dead.

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Photo: @jusko88

I missed Suci. I never made an effort to travel to any zoo which had a Sumatran rhino. Now it is unlikely that I will ever see one, with the last few rhinos in an off-show facility in Indonesia and a few in the wild, inaccessible part of Sumatra.

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Photo: @SaritaWolf

Some Zoochatters perhaps know the Jeremy Cherfas book 'Zoo 2000: A Look Beyond the Bars' from 1984. It includes a description of the Jungle Cruise in one of Disney amusement parks with its animatronic rhinos and elephants. The author imagined a dystopian future where people would enjoy robotic animal models spraying clean water on them, with real animals extinct and forgotten, considered unimportant or inferior. Forty years later, this is worryingly becoming a reality. This animatronic Sumatran rhino joined glyptodons, mammoths and dinosaurs in the Philadelphia Zoo.

This is a reminder for Zoochatters - zoos in the future may be more innovative, but some species seen today will be extinct. :(
 
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Some Zoochatters perhaps know the Jeremy Cherfas book 'Zoo 2000: A Look Beyond the Bars' from 1984. It includes a description of the Jungle Cruise in one of Disney amusement parks with its animatronic rhinos and elephants. The author imagined a dystopian future where people would enjoy robotic animal models spraying clean water on them, with real animals extinct and forgotten, considered unimportant or inferior. Forty years later, this is worryingly becoming a reality. This animatronic Sumatran rhino joined glyptodons, mammoths and dinosaurs in the Philadelphia Zoo.

This is a reminder for Zoochatters - zoos in the future may be more innovative, but some species seen today will be extinct. :(
This reminds me (if I do remember correctly) of that one part from Louis Lowry’s ‘The Giver’ when the protagonist (who can store and see information from the past) told his sister, who had an plush elephant, that elephants were once real animals.
 
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This reminds me (if I do remember correctly) of that one part from Louis Lowry’s ‘The Giver’ when the protagonist (who can store and see information from the past) told his sister, who had an plush elephant, that elephants were once real animals.

Most famous of such scenes is perhaps the spooky eagle owl from the classic sci-fi film Blade Runner.
 
I'm quite late, but this was an excellent thread! It really is interesting to see how zoos have developed and will continue to do so...
 
29. What makes a timeless zoo exhibit?
Everlasting exhibits which remained good for decades

full

Photo: @Animal

When making this thread, I noticed that some exhibits are already decades old but remained good. Others did not age well. Here are some perennially good exhibits which have been popular among generations of visitors

The African panorama at Tierpark Hagenbeck is actually the first ever exhibit built in modern times with naturalism in mind. It is 117 years old. It opened in 1907 and in 1997 has been declared a monument by the Hamburg city council. It combines four different exhibits - a flamingo pond, a hoofstock paddock which recently holds plains zebra and ostrich, an exhibit of lions and tall rocky pinnacles. They are separated by hidden fences. There is also a concealed path to watch the lions up close.

By modern standards of animal care, the lion exhibit is much too small and flamingos should not be kept flightless. But the panorama is still attractive, still makes a good impression. I wonder how the zoo will solve the problem of space for the lions.

These exhibits ostensibly only replicate a nature for an amusement attraction, but I would argue it is art, and often a high quality one. At least one zoo historian claims the same. Why art? They evoke a sense of beauty. They are not random pieces of habitat, but ones chosen and distilled to create a tiny landscape, using many of the classic art principles of perspective, composition and so on. And their non-triviality and high quality is proven by that tens of zoos and city parks tried the same, but failed to achieve a similar effect.

full

Photo: @AnaheimZoo
full

Photo: @Gomphothere

African Plains at Bronx Zoo are 84 years old, having opened on May 1, 1941. Like in Hamburg, they show savanna animals separated by hidden moats. But it is a much larger area of meadows, clumps of trees and some low rocks, with several enclosures for lions, African ungulates and birds. The interest of the zoo director Osborn was to show relationships in nature. So lions and nyala appear to share the same space to illustrate the ecological relations between predators and prey, not only because it looks cool.

In the following decades, Bronx Zoo employed a team of architects and used similar principles. The result is a whole palette of very good exhibits - World of Birds, Asian plains, African highlands for gelada and Nubian ibex, Himalayan highlands, Jungle World and Congo Gorilla Forest. Although some individual enclosures are too small or lack outdoor access, they remain interesting and attractive decades later. And will likely be enjoyed in future by new generations of zoo visitors, until their structural material physically breaks down.

Good zoo landscaping uses the same principles as good landscape architecture. They have been known for centuries. Designers of English country residences developed panoramic views in a similar way as modern zoos, including the use of hidden moats, which in Britain are called haha.

full

Photo: @Philipine eagle

Classical Gardens of Suzhou created in the 11th-19th centuries in China and this otter exhibit in Zürich Zoo both use the same methods to construct a little self-contained landscape in a small space, and to restrict and direct the view of a visitor.

This enclosure for Eurasian otters in is about 54 years old, having been built about 1969 / 1970.* But if not for the rather heavy concrete front wall, one might not notice its age. There is sufficient space, an underwater view, a look into the otters sleeping den, and the landscaping of boulders and native plants resembling a Swiss river. Wild otters sadly disappeared in Switzerland decades ago and did not come back until now.

full
Photo: @Maguari

Grzimek House in Frankfurt Zoo is 45 years old. It opened in 1978 and remains one of the best buildings for small mammals worldwide. While few exhibits had to change from larger to smaller mammals, they hold remarkably well.

Much of the charm are well constructed small indoor landscapes. In the night section, they include a bat cave with stalactites and a night savanna for aardvarks. In the day section, there is, among others, a rocky landscape for hyrax and a jungle enclosure for agoutis and marmosets. A visitor sees it immediately after entering, and when leaving the building, one realizes he looks at it again but at the treetop level.

full

Photo: @geomorph

Penguin Encounter at the SeaWorld San Diego
is 40 years old, having opened in 1983. It is completely artificial and in a commercial theme park. But it remains very interesting, penguins breed there, and one might not notice its age if not for the style of short educational films played on the TV screens.

There are the only emperor penguins in the Western world, a moving walkway in front of the 30 m viewing window and a gallery to sit and watch penguins for a longer time. There is a split underwater and above water view, real ice spread daily on the floor, a backdrop of rocks and a painted mural and an Antarctic light cycle which makes the exhibit appear gloomy on photos taken in summer. Plus a smaller but similar exhibit of Northern puffins, murres and ducks.

full

Photo: @snowleopard

Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle, together with Bronx, Minnesota, Zürich and Frankfurt zoos is known for having several perennially good exhibits. One is this grizzly exhibit in the Living Northwest Trail, which contains a stream and an underwater view. The composition is as carefully done as in Hagenbeck, but the center of the visitors view is a lowered stream, not the higher rocks. It opened in 1994, so is only 30 years old, but will likely stand the test of time. Other good exhibits at the Woodland Park Zoo include the gorilla habitat and the jaguar habitat.

So what it takes to make an timeless zoo exhibit, which will remain good for tens of years? I suggest the following characteristics:

1. Space. Expectations how much space should be dedicated to animals grow and grow. Good exhibits were always spacious for their time.

2. Theming is kept subtle. Rocks, if they are appropriate for the animals, are very realistic and not too overdone. Good exhibits contain much greenery, unless they represent a naturally barren habitat.

3. Using the classic principles of landscape architecture, especially composition - from the sides to the center showpiece. If there is something in the background behind the exhibit, it is hidden from view by rocks, trees or similar.

4. Buildings and man-made elements are hidden or maximally discreet and unobtrusive. Fashions in architecture change over time. At best, visitors will simply recognize 'it is so 2020s' and at worse they simply say it is obsolete. A creation which today is most fashionable and cutting edge will be outdated in 20 years.

5. There should be no cultural theming. Hundreds of zoos for over a hundred years built hundreds of cultural artifacts: exotic temples, huts, pagodas, ruins, totem poles and whatever. Most of them have been demolished long ago already, and virtually none was remarkable. There is a saying natura artis magistra or nature is the master of arts, and it seems to be at work. Time mercilessly eliminates cultural theming from zoos.

full

Photo: @twilighter

And for the contrast - Lubetkin Penguin Pool at the London Zoo. It opened in 1934 and is 25 years younger than the panorama at Hamburg. It managed something exceptional - zoologists at ZSL could not find an animal which could live in it comfortably. Currently it stands empty, and worse, it is a Grade I listed historical building. It seems that London historians and architects care about the unusual but not about aesthetics nor utility.

*It was difficult to track the precise age of old zoo exhibits from the pre-internet era, and the age is approximate.
This thread is superb, thank you. If I could add an opinion on the Lubetkin Penguin pool, AFAIK it is Listed due to being one of the earliest examples of modernist buildings (of any type) in the UK, not merely because it is unusual. It is also utterly beautiful in many people’s opinions, including mine! Don’t get me wrong, I’m glad the penguins get to live at Penguin beach now, it is vastly better for them!
 
I think that a mention of Lubetkins work at Dudley zoo particularly the old lion, tiger and polar bear "pits"as they were called when first built in 1937,have in recent years been updated to create wonderful enclosures for Arctic Foxes, Wolverine and Sumatran Tigers. Obviously these old enclosures could never be demolished due them having preservation notices on them
 
Idea

Something interesting a zoo could go into is a big microscopic exhibit with stuff different tiny animals like nematodes, water bears, and other stuff that lives in moss and mucky ponds

Zoos should display the whole spectrum of animal life and such a display would be quite eye opening
 
Idea

Something interesting a zoo could go into is a big microscopic exhibit with stuff different tiny animals like nematodes, water bears, and other stuff that lives in moss and mucky ponds

Zoos should display the whole spectrum of animal life and such a display would be quite eye opening

Luckily for you, it already exists in Amsterdam:

Europe's 100 must see exhibits
 
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