Abandoned Belle Isle Nature Zoo
Today’s photo gallery is one of an incredibly overgrown, abandoned zoo known as the Belle Isle Nature Zoo; formerly a place full of fun and joy, now empty and quiet.
What happens when an entire zoo falls into collapse, remaining untouched for years? If you were to walk the grounds of the once lively Belle Isle Zoo, you would find the answer to this. What was once used to shelter wild animals, from monkeys & cheetahs, to the king of the jungle for people’s odd enjoyment, has now become the very eerie reality of a true jungle. The elephants have vanished, and taking their place is nothing but nature’s combative overgrowth pouring upwards through cracks in the former habitat’s cement foundation. Where once was filled with water is now nearly bone dry, while trees and foliage cover boardwalks like emerald canopies. This has become nature’s zoo now, as it shows off the chaotic destruction it can bring forth once we simply turn our heads the opposite way.
This two-and-a-half mile long island sits atop the Detroit River, and has been a beautiful destination for generation after generation of families and tourists alike. In 1910, the decision had been made to place a zoo mid-park, which remained active for the next 46 years, welcoming well-dressed families and soon to be fading memories. Welcoming the year 1956, we find that the zoo had changed faces, becoming a children’s zoo, after the main zoo had moved to its current home in Royal Oak.
1980 would become the welcoming year for a place called “Safariland” to take the place of this now former children’s zoo. In June of this year, an unnamed 9 month old bear, resident to Safariland, had managed to secure an exit and make her way across a half mile of the Detroit River into Windsor, Canada. It was decided later that the bear would be released into the wild to continue her life naturally.
2002 rolled around and due to monetary and budgeting issues, the zoo was permanently closed, doomed to remain nothing but a fading memory. Much metal has been stripped by scrappers, people have made their marks with graffiti and the raised boardwalks continue to collapse more and more with each passing year. A new zoo has been built at an opposite end of the island park, so it is currently unclear what may come of this once bustling attraction. One thing is clear, however; nature will always remain the most powerful force on Earth, no matter how hard we try to overpower it.
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What a rare opportunity to visit both sides of the fence.
I did visit as a child in the 1970s. I honestly can’t recognize it in these photos. Anyway, on a brighter note, Belle Isle itself is still a park and open to the public.
Indeed Belle Isle is a great place to visit!