Jardín Zoológico de La Plata
Adresse
Pays
argentina
Horaires d'ouverture
Daily 09:00–18:00
Popularité
Argentina's oldest zoo, founded in 1888 in the purpose-built city of La Plata, easily reached from Buenos Aires.
Argentina's Oldest Zoo
Jardín Zoológico de La Plata is the oldest zoo in Argentina, founded in 1888 in La Plata, the capital of Buenos Aires Province, located approximately 60 kilometres south of Buenos Aires city. Designed by the renowned Argentine naturalist Francisco Moreno as part of La Plata's grand civic plan, the zoo was conceived alongside the city itself — La Plata was purpose-built as the provincial capital in the 1880s in one of the most ambitious urban planning exercises in South American history.
Historic Civic Design
La Plata was laid out on a perfect grid with diagonal avenues and a series of public parks and institutional buildings, all designed simultaneously. The zoo was part of this grand vision, intended to bring natural history education to the citizens of the new capital. Its sister institution, the Museo de La Plata (one of the finest natural history museums in South America), was built at the same time with the same civic ambitions.
Animal Collection
The zoo houses a broad range of species with strong representation of South American fauna:
- Jaguars, pumas, and ocelots — Argentina's wild cats
- Maned wolves — the iconic canid of South American savannahs
- Giant anteaters and armadillos
- Rheas — the large flightless bird of the Argentine pampas
- Guanacos and vicuñas — wild camelids of Patagonia and the Andes
- Marsh deer and pampas deer — native Argentine deer species
- Andean condors — Argentina's most magnificent bird
- African and Asian species — lions, tigers, zebras, and giraffes
Combined with Museo de La Plata
The zoo is close to the Museo de La Plata — one of the finest natural history museums in the Southern Hemisphere, with an extraordinary collection of Argentine paleontology and natural history. Combining both institutions in a single day makes La Plata an exceptional natural history destination, easily reached from Buenos Aires.