I love the old, 1920s Spanish stucco architecture of the bird, reptile, and primate houses. They’re all a pleasure to walk through, architecturally. But some of their exhibits are not spacious enough for the animals housed in them, which is why outdoor exhibit extensions like what they’re doing to the primate house are important. And did you know the herpetarium has over 200 species of reptiles/amphibians, but only 85 on exhibit at one time? They just don’t have the space anymore, especially for larger taxa like crocodilians. The 2016 Master Plan calls for outdoor, domed exhibits that would be attached to the herpetarium, one for the Congo, another for the Amazon, and a third for Southeast Asia. They do have the space around the building to do it. And the bird house doesn’t hold nearly as many species as it once did, because they’ve modernized it to give each species more space. So expanding the outdoor bird garden would be great, too, especially for more temperate species, thereby conserving indoor (and climate-controlled) space for tropical ones. But in any case, after Primate Canopy Trails next year, their next priority will assuredly be remaking the space that is now the Children’s Zoo. Fingers crossed for an Australia zone.