beastiality story - dogsex, horsesex and cowsex
Pygmy hippos, sloth bears, langur monkeys.
Apes and beastiality story monkeys
recommended route nos. 11 or 12
Gorillas, chimpanzees, gibbons, spider monkeys, Sulawesi macaques and lemurs.
Reptiles
recommended route no. 12
Snakes, crocodiles, lizards, tortoises, frogs and beaded lizards.
Aquarium
recommended route no. 13
Piranhas, seahorses and many reef fish.
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ARCHITECTURE AT LONDON ZOO
When London Zoo opened in 1827, Decimus Burton was called on to lay out the grounds and house the animals. Many other leading architects have since contributed to the built environment of the Zoo, creating a collection of buildings that includes two Grade I and eight Grade II listed structures.
Giraffe House 1836-7
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by Decimus Burton, listed Grade II
Five-metre high doors play dominate the Giraffe House. Giraffes can be as tall as four-and-a-half metres so the scale of the building's noble proportions is a direct response to the height of its residents. Although some of its details are based on Classical Roman architecture, the building's overall shape and size is determined by its function.
Snowdon Aviary 1962-4
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by Tony Armstrong-Jones (Lord Snowdon), Cedric Price and Frank Newby
The aviary looks almost weightless - like a bird. Its frame was pioneering in that it made use of aluminium, and in that it was an example of a kind of engineering that uses tension to support its structure. A giant net 'skin' is wrapped around a skeleton of poles - paired diagonal 'sheer legs' at either end, each lined to a three-sided pyramid or 'tetrahedron' - which is held in position only by cables.
Round House 1932-3
by Tecton, listed Grade I
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One of the first buildings to be built in the Modernist style in Britain. Modernists believed that the best buildings reflected their function in a clearly expressed way, and this style dominated British architecture from the 1950s to the 1980s. The Round House is cowsex circular so that a half-drum shaped screen could be slid from within one half of it to enclose the other in cold weather, as a protection for the gorillas it was built to house. Like the Giraffe House one hundred years before, its simple shape is a direct response to its function, but now there about are only minimal references to Classical architecture.
Penguin Pool 1934
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by Tecton, listed Grade I
The Penguin Pool is perhaps the most well-loved building in the Zoo. Like the Round House, it was designed by the influential Tecton architectural firm, led by Russian emigre Berthold Lubetkin. Tecton's brand of Modernist style was unusually dogsex elegant and playful and is a reminder of how innovative the style must have looked when it first appeared. The interlocking ramps make a perfect articles setting for the antics of the penguins.
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Elephant and Rhino Pavilion 1962-5
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by Sir Hugh Casson, Neville Conder and Partners
As heavy and solid as an elephant - the perfect contrast to the Snowdon Aviary, which was being built at the same time. The concrete ribs covering the outside imitate an elephant's hide, and they also prevent the animals from damaging the building. Tall green lanterns make 'trumpeting trunks' shapes on the roof, and also light the interior dramatically.
Mappin Terraces 1913-4
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by Sir Peter Chalmers Mitchell and John James Joass, listed Grade II
This extraordinary imitation of a mountain landscape was designed to provide a naturalistic habitat for bears and other animals. Sir Peter Chalmers Mitchell, whose inspiration it was, was the Secretary of the Zoological Society of London from 1903-35. The construction of the horsesex terraces showed what could be done with reinforced concrete, which was then a comparatively new material. The cavernous interior, like that of a real mountain, holds reservoirs of water which is filtered and circulted into the Aquarium below.
The Mappin Terraces houses sloth bears and Hanuman langurs.
Clock Tower 1828
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