The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Savanna makes its way to atlanta

New entry plaza also among improvemen­ts totaling almost 5 acres and $50M at Zoo Atlanta.

- By Bo Emerson bemerson@ajc.com

On a recent sunny Monday, there was growling down at Zoo Atlanta, but it did not come from Hondo or his two brothers, the young African lions relaxing in the sun.

It was, instead, the sound of bulldozers and front-end loaders, moving dirt and hauling girders, as they dig under and around the old Cyclorama building.

The constructi­on at that building, soon to become a new event facility and administra­tive office, is part of a $50 million expansion that is the most ambitious project since the zoo was transforme­d in the 1980s from a national embarrassm­ent to a national exemplar.

This week, the zoo revealed more details of that project, along with some artist’s renderings showing an enormously expanded African Savanna exhibit and a new entry plaza.

The expansion will add almost 5 acres to the zoo’s 40-acre footprint, most of it around the Cyclorama building, which will be

renamed Savanna Hall.

The renaming is not in honor of the city Savannah, but in reference to the dif- ferently spelled “savanna” grasslands of Africa, where the wild elephants roam. The 57,724-square-foot Savanna Hall will look out on the Afri- can Savanna exhibit, where the zoo’s two elephants will have much more roaming room, enough for four more pachyderms, plus giraffes and zebras.

Savanna Hall itself will be transforme­d from its days as the home of the cyclo- rama painting, “The Battle of Atlanta.” The interior has been gutted and will be replaced with three floors that will house administra­tive offices, a catering kitchen, event facilities, a ballroom and balconies that look out on the wildlife below.

The proposed relocation of that enormous, 371-by-49foot panoramic painting, back in 2014, was the event that triggered a cascade of changes, both at Zoo Atlanta and at the Atlanta History Center. A major gift that year made it possible for the History Center to construct a new cylindrica­l building to conserve and house the painting on its Buckhead campus.

The planned relocation of the painting suddenly gave the modest-sized zoo more elbow room. It resulted in Grant Park’s historic 1921 Cyclorama structure, and the nearly 5 acres surround- ing it, being conveyed to the zoo. With room for administra­tive space in the reborn Savanna Hall, the zoo real- ized it could demolish its cur- rent administra­tion build- ing, which sits in the middle of what will become an entrance plaza.

That provides a solution to what has been a bit of an eyesore at the zoo. The first thing that visitors see, walk- ing from the Cherokee Avenue parking lot, is the administra­tion building, making the approach to the zoo a problemati­c experience.

“People can’t tell where the entrance to the zoo is,” said Raymond B. King, president and CEO of Zoo Atlanta, sitting beneath a portrait of a gorilla in his soon-to-be demolished office. “They knock on the window asking how to get there.”

That bottleneck will be replaced with an open plaza, pathways, benches, a fountain and trees that will be part of what the zoo is call- ing a Grand New View.

Workers broke ground last fall at Savanna Hall and the African Savanna exhibit. The exhibit should open in the summer of 2019, and the new plaza and refurbishe­d Savanna Hall should both be ready in the spring of 2020, King said. A fund drive more than met the estimated $38 million cost of the changes, but those costs have gone up.

King said replacing the foundation of the 1921 Cyclo- rama structure added unforeseen bills, as did new tariffs on steel, driving the cost of the project to $50 million. The overage was covered by the zoo’s donors and tax credits for preserving the historic structure.

At the zoo, one can see crews carefully handing steel I-beams through a hole in the wall of the old Cyclorama building, like a reverse game of Jenga.

“It would have been easier to build a new building,” said King, but the historic value of the Cyclorama building was compelling. Also, the neighborho­od would have been sad to see it go. “We will celebrate the history of the building, inside the building.”

During constructi­on, some species, including giraffes, ostriches, warthogs and zebras, have not been visible to guests, but they’ve still been receiving care on zoo grounds.

The African Savanna exhibit will provide three times as much room for elephants, meaning that Zoo Atlanta will be able to house bulls (which must be cared for separately) as well as cows. With the approval of the Associatio­n of Zoos & Aquariums and its Species Survival Plan, that would mean that the zoo could begin a breeding program. It could, at the least, increase the herd and provide more interactio­n for these very social animals.

In the area freed up by the elephants, the zoo plans a habitat for white rhinoceros.

Other changes are on the horizon. The city of Atlanta is building an undergroun­d parking deck in the part of Grant Park adjacent to the zoo, which will solve some of the zoo’s parking issues. A state-of-the-art barn for the elephants is also under constructi­on.

Despite a few surprises, King said he’s confident in the constructi­on timeline and is already booking events at the hall for April 2020.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY ZOO ATLANTA ?? An artist’s watercolor­s show the exterior of Savanna Hall and the African Savanna exhibit that will be part of Zoo Atlanta’s $50 million expansion.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY ZOO ATLANTA An artist’s watercolor­s show the exterior of Savanna Hall and the African Savanna exhibit that will be part of Zoo Atlanta’s $50 million expansion.

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