Como Park Zoo and Conservatory

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Como Park Zoo and Marjorie McNeely Conservatory
Como Park Zoo and Conservatory-2006.jpg
The Marjorie McNeely Conservatory at Como Park
Type Urban park
Location Saint Paul, Minnesota
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Area 759 acres (307 ha)
Created 1873
Visitors about 1.9 million annually
Status Open all year

The Como Park Zoo and Marjorie McNeely Conservatory (or just Como Zoo and Conservatory) are located in Como Park at 1225 Estabrook Drive, Saint Paul, Minnesota. The park, zoo and conservatory are owned by the City of Saint Paul and are a division of Saint Paul Parks and Recreation. The attractions located there include the zoo, the conservatory, an amusement park, a carousel, Lake Como, a golf course, a pool and more. The park receives more than 1.9 million visitors annually.[1] Como Park is a free park and while no admission fee is charged for the zoo or conservatory, voluntary donations of $3 per adult and $2 child are suggested.[2]

Como Park

In 1873 the City of Saint Paul acquired 300 acres (120 ha) of land around Como Lake that would become a public park. Today the 384-acre (155 ha) park includes:

  • 2.3 miles (3.7 km) of paved trails
  • Athletic fields
  • Como Golf Course - 18 hole, 70 par
  • Como Lake
    • 1.67 mile paved path around the lake
    • Fishing Pier
    • Lakeside Pavilion - includes Black Bear Crossings restaurant
    • Paddleboat rentals
  • Como Pool
  • Como Town amusement park
  • Picnic shelters
  • Putt'er There Mini Golf
  • Medallion

Art/Sculptures/Historic Structures in Como Park

  • Bridge No. L-5853 - Abandoned pedestrian bridge over former street car tracks, built in 1904 and engineered by William S. Hewett. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. It is significant for being one of the oldest examples of a reinforced concrete bridge.
  • Bridge No. 92247 - Lexington Avenue Bridge - Also built in 1904 and engineered by William S. Hewett, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. It is significant for being one of the oldest examples of a reinforced concrete bridge and because it is wider than it is long.
  • Cafesjian's Carousel
  • Comfort Station - Prairie style restrooms located in the West Picnic Grounds that were completed in 1917 and restored in 1998.
  • Constructing Friendship - A sculpture by Michael Sinesio created in 2006 as a part of the Minnesota Rocks! International Stone Carving Symposium. It is located at the west entrance to the park.
  • Frog Pond - Completed in 1910, the overlook has a pergola that was donated in 1929. The granite frog, from which the pond gets its name, is from 1923.
  • Gates Ajar - Originally installed in 1894. The iron gates were installed on the structure sometime later during the depression by Chief City Blacksmith, Walter Cronk. Being refurbished in 2007.
  • Global Harmony Labyrinth - Dedicated in 2005, it celebrates the Sister City relationship between Saint Paul and Nagasaki, Japan. (read about the construction of the labyrinth)
  • Granite Frog - Located in the middle of Frog Pond directly south of the conservatory, last remaining component of the original Japanese garden.
  • Hamms Memorial Waterfall
  • Henrik Ibsen - Bust of Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen, created by Norwegian-born artist Jacob Fjelde and given to the city in 1907 by a Norwegian fraternal organization. The bust was stolen in 1982 and replaced in the late 1990s. ("Oh, Henrik!" City Pages, October 21, 1998)
  • Historic Street Car Station - A station for the Twin City Rapid Transit Company and the Como-Harriet line.
  • Joyce Kilmer Memorial Fireplace - The large stone fireplace was erected in 1936 in memory of poet Joyce Kilmer. For years, the fireplace was in a state of disrepair, but in 2011 it was refurbished and rededicated.
  • Lakeside Pavilion - The current building was constructed in 1992 as an exact replica of the original 1905 building.
  • Lily Pond - Originally built in 1895 and known as the Aquarium, the pond featured exotic lily pads. While the lily pads returned to Como Park at the conservatory in 2005, the original pond has been dry and unused for some time.
  • Mannheimer Memorial - Designed in 1905-1906 by Cass Gilbert, who also designed the Minnesota State Capitol building.
  • Paisley Perch - Another Minnesota Rocks! sculpture created in 2006, this bench-shaped creation is by Peter Morales. It is located at the southern corner of the park off Lexington Avenue, next to the ball fields.
  • Points of Compass - A life-size sundial designed and constructed by Superintendent of Parks George Nason in the 1930s.
  • Schiller Statue - Bronze figure of Johann von Schiller with a granite base by artist Ignatium Taschner, dedicated in 1907.
  • Schiffman Fountain
  • Submariner's Memorial - Dedicated in 1965 as a memorial to the lost crew of the USS Swordfish.

Saint Paul Winter Carnival at Como Park

In 1939 Lake Como hosted the Winter Carnival Ice Palace and the Winter Carnival Medallion has been hidden in Como Park eight times (1956, 1965, 1980, 1990, 1997, 2001, 2003, and 2014).

Como Zoo

1936 Zoological Building
Wolf exhibit, June 1980

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The first zoo in Saint Paul was on Harriet Island when in 1897, the city of St. Paul received a gift of three deer. Additional animals followed, when more room was needed to house the animals they were moved to facilities at Como Park. Como Zoo continued to grow through donations of animals and money.

The Art Deco Zoological Building was designed in 1936 by Charles Bassford [1] as part of the federally funded Works Progress Administration. Other WPA structures were completed in the 1930s, including Monkey Island (now Seal Island), barn and bear grotto.

In the 1980s several new exhibits were added as part of a major renovation project, including the Large Cat exhibit (1980), Aquatic Animal Building and conversion of Monkey Island to Seal Island (1982), the Primate Facility (1985), the Land and Water Bird exhibit (1986) and the African Hoofed Stock Facility (1987).

Art at Como Zoo

  • Don the Gorilla - Bronze and stone statue of a popular gorilla named Don donated by artist Betty Sievert in 1982. Located outside the primate house.
  • Giraffes - Fiberglass giraffes created by Third Street Studios and donated in memory of Sandra Kay Bjick in 1994. Located near the giraffe exhibit.
  • Polar Bears - Fiberglass polar bears created by Third Street Studios. Located near the polar bear exhibit.
  • Sparky - Fiberglass sculpture of 'Sparky' the sea lion who performs entertaining shows at Como Zoo. Created by Third Street Studios in 1997 in celebration of the zoo's centennial. Located near the Sparky Amphitheater.
  • Toby the Tortoise - Bronze sculpture of the popular tortoise named Toby. Create by the artist Tischler. Located in front of the Zoological building in the Como Park Zoo Donor Plaza.
  • Penguins - Fiberglass sculpture of penguins.
  • Earth Day Mural - Created by Teresa Cox on April 22, 2000 with help from zoo visitors.
  • Family - A set of three abstract, wire-frame sculptures created by Russell Erickson in 1978. The sculpture stood in front of the FDA building in Minneapolis until 2004 when the building was demolished and the sculpture eventually moved to the Como Zoo as a temporary measure. As of 2009 it is located in a grassy picnic area across from Seal Island.

A new Polar bear exhibit was finished in 2010. The two twin Polar bear brothers (Buzz and Neil) returned from their temporary stay in Canada. The exhibit includes a shallow and deep pool plus a middle room. It also has a back room where the Polar bears can choose to stay in the AC.

Casey the Gorilla

On May 13, 1994 Casey the gorilla, 400 pounds, scaled the wall of his enclosure and wandered free around the zoo for 45 minutes. Visitors were ushered to safety as zoo staff shot Casey with a tranquilizer and returned him to his enclosure. This resulted in the zoo building a temporary slanted wall around the enclosure to keep this from happening again and the zoo is planning on building a new area for the gorillas making it safer and impossible to escape from. The zoo opened a new exhibit in 2013 called Gorilla Forest. Casey has since been moved to the Audubon Zoo in New Orleans.

Marjorie McNeely Conservatory

Como Park Conservatory
File:Como Conservatory Sunken Garden.JPG
The sunken garden in the Marjorie McNeely Conservatory
Location Como Park
St. Paul, Minnesota
Built 1913
Architect Frederick Nussbaumer
NRHP Reference # 74001033
Added to NRHP November 19, 1974

The Marjorie McNeely Conservatory (0.5 acres) was first opened to the public in November 1915. This facility is open to the public every day of the year. It includes the following gardens and galleries:

  • The Ordway Garden - features a Bonsai Gallery and native grass terrace.
  • Enchanted and Excedra Garden - a butterfly garden that includes a mix of perennials and annuals grasses, flowers, and shrubs.
  • Fern Room - features a wide array of tree ferns, Bird's-nest fern, Adiantum, and several others.
  • Japanese Garden - sansui style, mountain and water landscape, a gift from a prominent Japanese landscape architect that represents friendship and peace between Saint Paul and its sister city Nagasaki, Japan.
  • North Garden - useful plants such as aloe, bamboo, bananas, cacao, coffee, figs, macadamia, mahogany, manila hemp, manioc, papaya, etc.
  • Orchid House (Horticultural Staff Only)
  • Palm Dome (64' high and 100' in diameter) - more than 150 palm species, as well as a rotational display of orchids and bromeliads.
  • Sunken Garden - features five seasonal flower shows a year.
  • Tropical Encounters - A new exhibit (opened fall 2006) featuring animals and plants from Central and South America. This is a separate exhibit located in the Visitor's Center.
Comoplant.jpg

The conservatory was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

File:Comoplant2.jpg
During the spring flower display at the Sunken Garden.

Art at the Marjorie McNeely Conservatory

See also

Notes

  1. Taken from Como Insider, July–September 2009, page 9.
  2. http://www.comozooconservatory.org/about/faq/

External links