PRESENTATION
In a 15 ha (37 acres) park planted with trees, at the heart of the Bois de Vincennes (Vincennes wood), the Paris zoo is one of France's best-known zoos. It offers the visitor a welcome change of scenery and the chance to get close to almost 500 animals.
- Â A little zoo that grew
- Numerous places of discovery
- Animals in the diversity of their habitats
Today, the zoo has taken a new direction. It's now a player in nature conservation and is no longer content with just displaying living animals to the public. The zoo considers the animal to be an ambassador of biodiversity. Richly-planted decor, landscaped enclosures, frescoes and educational signs invite the visitor to plunge into the centre of the animal?s natural environment.
THE GRAND ROCHER
65 m (214 ft) high, the Grand Rocher (Great Rock) is a false rock and real water tower. It is an astonishing reinforced concrete construction that overlooks the capital. The visitor can climb it, but from the inside
- Â An architectural challenge
- A water supply for the animals
- A new life
Deteriorating through its exposure to the elements and having become dangerous for the visitors who visited its two panoramic terraces, the Grand Rocher was closed to the public in 1982. Its renovation "to its original state" began in 1994. In March 1997, it opened its doors once again, inaugurated by the ministers for National Education, Research and the Environment as well as the Mayor of Paris.
The entire casing was pulled off, the rocky walls reinforced and each element faithfully reconstructed. At the same time, numerous improvements were made for the animals' and visitors' well-being, as well as for the functioning of the zoo: a gazebo halfway up the rock, a lift or, for the courageous, a stairway with 352 steps. Once inside the belly of the rock, the path alternates interior and exterior passages: the visitor will be able to see the vultures' aviary, the goats scaling its concrete sides, the otters at play in the huge glazed pool. A superb view awaits the visitor at the summit, which extends over the whole zoo, the Bois de Vincennes and in the distance, Montmartre and the Eiffel tower
WALKS
- A multitude of species…
- … many of which are endangered
- Our objectives: conservation here and reintroduction elsewhere
The zoo continues its work to keep animals in their environmental domains. The new spaces illustrate the efforts made: the gallery for the amphibian hippopotami, warm and humid, a real little piece of Africa in Paris, or the sifakière, a vast aviary which, in a recreated natural environment, houses three species of Madagascan lemurs including the rare crowned sifaka. The zoo also participates in numerous conservation programmes in situ, in the wild, in other words. For example, the zoo notably collaborates regularly in the efforts to reintroduce extremely rare antelopes to Morocco, Tunisia and Senegal
OPENING TIMES
Open every sunday from 09:00 to 18:00
Open every holiday from 09:00 to 18:00
Open every day from 09:00 to 18:00
Address :
53, avenue de Saint-Maurice 75012 Paris
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