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Join me as I go back to the Bristol zoo project once more for a construction update on the new African forest set to open in spring of 2026 as well as a full tour of all the animals. Featuring Gelada’s, Eurasian Brown bears, Wolverines, Eurasian grey wolves, cheetahs, giraffes, zebras, ringtail lemur monkeys, ostriches, red pandas and so much more. Bristol Zoo Project, formerly known as Wild Place Project, is a wildlife conservation park in North Bristol, United Kingdom. It is run by Bristol Zoological Society (BZS) and was the sister site of Bristol Zoo Gardens until closure of that site in 2022. In summer 2023, Wild Place Project rebranded as "Bristol Zoo Project" following the transition of Bristol Zoo Gardens from their Clifton site. The park has been designed to link specific ecosystems and conservation programmes around the world, and was originally intended to be split into biomes, representing species found only in specific habitats. Current areas include: Bear Wood, Benoué National Park and Discover Madagascar. Bristol Zoological Society announced on 27 November 2020 that its historic Bristol Zoo Gardens site in Clifton would close, with the animals moved to the Wild Place Project site close to the M5 motorway. The Western lowland gorillas, Collared mangabeys, African grey parrots, Slender-snouted crocodiles, okapis and mandrills will be in a new central African rainforest area. The Eastern black rhinoceroses and Ostriches would join the giraffes, zebra, elands, Red river hogs and cheetahs in the Benoue National Park area. The new conservation breeding centre would include Annam leaf turtles, Lesser Antillean iguanas, Pancake tortoises, Radiated tortoises, Roti Island snake-necked turtles, Indochinese box turtles, Lemur leaf frogs, Mountain chicken frogs, Marshall's pygmy chameleons, Turquoise dwarf geckos, Blue-spotted tree monitors, Leaf-tail geckos, Deserta Grande wolf spiders, Polynesian tree snails, Lord Howe Island stick insects, two species of Madeiran land snail (Discula lyelliana and Geomitra grabhami), Socorro doves, Visayan tarictic hornbills, Sumatran laughingthrushes, Philippine cockatoos, Javan green magpies, European turtle doves, Mindanao bleeding-hearts, Negros bleeding-heart pigeons, pink pigeons, Malagasy cichlids, Malagasy rainbow fish and powder blue panchax, Pupfish and goodeids and White clawed crayfish. Finally, there was to be a new entrance with a new café, new gift shop, and new entry exhibits.