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Congo Entrance

The Wildlife Conservation Society's Bronx Zoo, one of the largest zoos in the world, wanted to develop a new way to teach the public about gorillas and other animals of the central African rain forest, as well as inspire advocacy on behalf of these creatures and their imperiled native habitat. A new kind of exhibit was needed: a living museum that would put people right into the rain forest.

 

Congo Gorilla Forest breaks down barriers between the viewer and the viewed. The exhibit, designed by Helpern Architects and the Zoo's exhibit and curatorial staff, seamlessly merges structure with landscape —a 6.5-acre re-creation of the rain forest—to provide the public with a powerful educational and emotional experience.

 

Visitors enter a 43,800 square foot, two-story building disguised by a facade of man-made boulders and jungle vegetation. Galleries on the first floor combine views of the re-created Congo and its inhabitants with interactive displays to teach the lessons of preservation. In many spaces, people and gorillas come face to face, separated only by laminated glass. Panoramic, full-height windows provide breathtaking views into this world. On the second floor, a learning center combines educational programming with impressive above-ground views of the habitats.

 

Since opening in 1999, Congo Gorilla Forest has exceeded expectations for attendance and fundraising for conservation, and has spawned a new breed of zoo exhibits worldwide. With its success, the exhibit has become invaluable in the fight to save the central African rain forest and its inhabitants.

 

Bronx Zoo Congo Gorilla Forest

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Uploaded on January 13, 2009
Taken on July 26, 2008