Posted by: Monica Lake, Capital Projects
We can’t wait to post updates and behind-the-scenes peeks at our construction progress as these new animal homes come to life. If you’ve followed our previous Asian Tropical Forest postings, you know just how extensive and innovative this heart-of-the-zoo transformation is.
When phase one opens in May 2013, you’ll meet Asian small-clawed otters for the first time and a variety of tropical birds. Kids will get super hands on in a new nature-play area designed to stimulate their cognitive, emotional and social development.
Our sloth
bears Randy and Tasha were out in full regalia Tuesday, sniffing,
scratching, balancing on logs and slurping their favorite foods—all to greet
200+ zoo lovers and advocates who gathered to help us celebrate a major
milestone: breaking ground on the new
Asian Tropical Forest exhibit complex!
Nearly 100 additional zoo fans of the
smaller variety “dug in” to make way for new homes for Asian small-clawed
otters, sloth bears and Malayan tigers.
Kids from Orca
Children’s Center, North Seattle Fives Cooperative and West Woodland Elementary
School joined the ceremony. Photo by Ryan Hawk/Woodland Park Zoo.
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The kids also did a great job of overseeing
the work of several leaders of the Asian Tropical Forest capital campaign,
donors and public officials. The leaders’ mission? Earn their stripes by
filling the tiger shovels, of course. Over and over and over again.
The most progress, however, was made by
our design-build team members. There is a lot of terrain to prepare and myriad exhibit
components to create for the new 2-acre complex. Here they are taking a hard
earned break.
It wasn’t all work and no fun! This is the zoo, after all. Kids learned how
to make elephant poo paper (eeew! cool!) and sharpened their wildlife art
skills, crayons in hand (and sometimes out of hand).
Budding wildlife artists. Photo by Ryan Hawk/Woodland Park Zoo.
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The night before, to help kick things
off, King 5’s Evening Magazine took viewers behind the scenes with
our animal experts to witness the sloth bear’s unusual, vacuum-like feeding
adaptations – which the film crew dubbed “the zoo’s hairiest appliance.” Check
out those live meal worms!
We can’t wait to post updates and behind-the-scenes peeks at our construction progress as these new animal homes come to life. If you’ve followed our previous Asian Tropical Forest postings, you know just how extensive and innovative this heart-of-the-zoo transformation is.
Asian small-clawed otters exhibit opening 2013. Photo courtesy of
Santa Barbara Zoo.
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When phase one opens in May 2013, you’ll meet Asian small-clawed otters for the first time and a variety of tropical birds. Kids will get super hands on in a new nature-play area designed to stimulate their cognitive, emotional and social development.
Nature-play area for
kids opening 2013. Concept rendering by Studio Hanson/Roberts.
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We continue to raise funds for phase
two of this amazing new complex – the new homes for sloth bears and Malayan tigers, which we anticipate opening in 2014. When
all done, this community will have a new natural wonder like no other. Check
out the Get Your Paws on Our Exhibit promotion and follow the More Wonder
More Wild campaign’s progress at www.morewonder.org. Thanks for your support!
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