Sacramento Zoo releases new plans for proposed Land Park expansion. What changed

The Sacramento Zoo’s planned expansion into William Land Park will no longer replace the historic vista area with a statue of Charles Swanston and a nearby garden, according to new diagrams released by the zoo.

Read more Sacramento Zoo releases new plans for proposed Land Park expansion. What changed

The diagrams, which were released Tuesday morning, show the zoo still expanding into a former pony ride area on the east side of Land Park Drive and into spaces directly north of the zoo. But there is now a carve-out where the zoo had previously sought the Swanston statue and garden area, with the zoo instead planning to seek other nearby land.

Some speakers had raised concerns about the fate of the statue during a Sacramento City Council meeting in late April when the council agreed to a memorandum of understanding with the zoo about the expansion.

“We were hearing from the community that it mattered,” Sacramento Zoological Society Board President Elizabeth Stallard told The Bee after the diagrams were released. “We want to be good neighbors.”

What the zoo now seeks in Land Park

The zoo, which is currently around 14.3 acres and among the smallest Association of Zoos and Aquariums accredited zoos in the United States, was previously seeking 5.8 acres of Land Park for the expansion.

The proposal included 1.4 acres from the former pony ride area, which was dismantled by city workers in February and 4.4 acres for the land that included the Swanston statue and the gardens. The new diagrams show that the zoo will instead ask for other land north of its entrance that runs along Land Park Drive and 15th Avenue curving back toward the entrance of Holy Spirit School.

Stallard said that by doing this, the zoo will use about 0.2 acres less of the park in its expansion.

Rick Stevenson, a Land Park volunteer who had spoken at the April council meeting and urged not destroying the statue welcomed the news that it was no longer in the expansion area.

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“I think it’s good for the zoo, it’s good for the neighborhood, it’s good for the park,” Stevenson said.

Another person who was pleased with the news was the city’s preservation director, Sean de Courcy, who said the statue was among Land Park’s oldest features and that the adjacent landscaping had been designed with the view in mind that it provides.

“I think that preserving that feature and the view shared will be is an important element of the park landscape,” de Courcy said.

What comes next

When the city and zoo agreed to the MOU, it came with the understanding that the study and public engagement period would last for months.

The zoo is holding a series of public events in the months to come related to the expansion, with an open house scheduled for June 17.

“I think only our hope is that putting this out there in the community is kind of the opportunity … to visualize what an expansion in Land Park would look like and to allow the community to share our exciting vision for getting this done right,” Stallard said.

She added, “if people want to learn more, we want to give people the chance to do that and engage with us.”

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