There was a backlash from local people who didn't want to pay to visit the 10 acres of London Zoo has an option to buy. The zoo also had financial problems at the time
I’m not surprised there was backlash. Public interest should take the priority, and people use every inch of the park. Meanwhile London Zoo has plenty of unused space (the canal…)There was a backlash from local people who didn't want to pay to visit the 10 acres of London Zoo has an option to buy. The zoo also had financial problems at the time
Would you mind expanding on when the subject was last raised and why they decided not to pursue
As "Dassie rat" has already responded, there was a lot of opposition from local residents who didn't want to lose part of "their" park and there was a concern that this would generate bad publicity for the zoo. Moreover this was shortly after the zoo's closure crisis and the ZSL didn't have the finance to develop the extra land.There was a backlash from local people who didn't want to pay to visit the 10 acres of London Zoo has an option to buy. The zoo also had financial problems at the time
Can't find the link to it now, but in 2021/2 there were plans released that included this as the third and final phase of the Cloisters redevelopment, which also brought about the Aquarium and Butterfly House. The fact that monitor lizards among other reptiles feature on the fencing used to section off areas of the zoo under development in recent times (such as the sea lion house whilst it was being demolished) may also hint at this being a plan, although I don't believe any work has started yet.They’ve got an awful lot more to do in London along with Whipsnade, it’ll be interesting to see what they do next, will it be an aquarium at London, a reptile house in the old discovery centre at Whipsnade, the North Bank, 3 Island Pond, Mappins, Casson or Round House?
I think that you are right about Durrell's description of architects.My concerns about demolishing the Mappins,would be the enormous cost and then how long it would take to put something worthwhile in its placeListed buildings can be demolished, though permission requires jumping through numerous hoops to put it mildly!
Realistically though could the Mappin ever be converted into something useful? And the elephant/rhino monstrosity was never a practical building. (Was it Durrell who described architects as the most dangerous animals in a zoo?)
The ZSL should be trying very, very hard to get both delisted with a view to demolition and redevelopmnent.
Indeed, it was Gerald Durrell.Was it Durrell who described architects as the most dangerous animals in a zoo?
Why a veterinary surgeon?Indeed, it was Gerald Durrell.
His actual comment was that the two most dangerous animals in a zoo are an architect and a vetinerary surgeon.
I think that in those days, wild animal veterinary work was very much in its infancy and people like Durrell viewed vets with a certain amount of mistrustWhy a veterinary surgeon?
The zoo will only be closed weekdays during this period; it will still be opened Saturday 25th and Sunday 26th January.ZSL have announced that , from 20th-31st January 2025, London Zoo will be closed for refurbishment
According to the recent e-mail to ZSL Fellows:-Do we know what they will be doing?
"we can devote time to tackling some of the jobs that are difficult or unsafe to do with visitors around."
Is how it is phrased I the email.