It's an old joke: Where does a 500-pound gorilla sleep? But there's a fresh answer at the Como Park Zoo and Conservatory: In a new $11 million exhibit.
Gorilla Forest opens Thursday with six new residents — plus one familiar face, the 525-pound silverback named Schroeder. The 13,000-square-foot habitat features new interiors and two new outside areas that make up the largest all-mesh gorilla enclosure in North America.
The renovation marks another step in the evolution of this urban zoo, which dates to 1897. The old exhibit halls that consisted of little more than prison cells are gone, replaced over time by more natural environments.
"The changes in zoos have been amazing," said Michelle Furrer, director and campus manager of the zoo and conservatory. "The old zoos were just cages. Now, as we've learned more about habitat, they are much more of an immersive experience. That's better for the animals and the people."
Six new gorillas have been relocated from other zoos. They have been split into two groups with separate indoor and outdoor homes. In the "family" group, Schroeder, who has been a Como Park mainstay since 1991, has been joined by three females — Alice, Dara and Nne (pronounced Eenie) — in hopes that they eventually will mate.
The other side of the exhibit is home to what the trainers are calling the "bachelors" — Virgil, Samson and Jabir — three related males that came as a package deal.
Which raises another question: How do you ship gorillas from one zoo to another?
"FedEx," said Allison Jungheim, one of the senior zookeepers.