| Toronto Star
Jan. 24, 2005. 06:44 AM
PETER GORRIE
FEATURE WRITER
Aquarium dilemma
It's a tough business, U.S. experts say And local proposal lacks
key elements
How do you turn several thousand fish into one white elephant?
It's not a magician's trick.
Instead, it's the almost inevitable result if a public aquarium,
such as the one proposed for Toronto's Exhibition Place, is built
in the wrong place and in the wrong way.
Presto! A bright and shimmering attraction is transformed into
a lumbering burden that has a ravenous appetite for cash and leaves
piles of unsavoury problems in its wake.
Although Toronto's project is at the very early stages — private-sector
proponents have until Feb. 25 to express interest — some aquarium
experts suggest it's heading for trouble.
Aquariums are expensive to build and very costly to operate, they
say. And, in the current climate where competition for entertainment
spending is intense, they require certain things to succeed.
Three elements are key, says Deb Fassnacht, executive vice-president
of the Shedd Aquarium in Chicago and a student of the industry.
They need to be part of a critical mass of attractions. They can't
be saddled with debt. And they must have "something charismatic"
to attract the large numbers of paying customers they require to
stay afloat.
The proposed Toronto aquarium appears to be missing at least two
of those essentials; the third is uncertain.
The 4.63-hectare site is tucked away at the west end of Exhibition
Place, a barren expanse that for most of the year is devoid of people.
The main nearby attractions are tired, summer-only Ontario Place,
the cavernous National Trade Centre, a small casino and a dinner
theatre.
As for charismatic attractions, it won't include the most popular
: whales, dolphins and other marine mammals.
"There are restrictions: no mammals in this aquarium,"
says Councillor Joe Pantalone, who, as chair of Exhibition Place,
is spearheading the project. "Mammals are biologically our
cousins and it would be completely inappropriate" to bring
them in, he says.
"We don't have whales and dolphins in our aquariums,"
says Bob Masterson, president of Ripley Entertainment Inc. of Orlando,
Fla., which operates two aquariums in U.S. cities, is building two
others and is expected to be a leading candidate to construct Toronto's.
That policy will avoid conflict with powerful animal rights activists,
who are vowing to fight any attempt to include whales, dolphins
or other marine mammals in the project.
"We've put them on notice: it would spark a massive controversy
if they attempt to bring in any mammals," says Julie Woodyer,
campaigns director for Zoocheck Canada, in Toronto. "It won't
just be us. It will be massive. There will be groups from right
around the world lobbying the city for this not to be allowed to
happen."
Excluding marine mammals will, however, make it more difficult
to attract crowds of visitors, particularly at the high admission
prices aquariums must charge to cover their costs.
"You have to have ... sharks or marine mammals or something,"
Fassnacht says.
Critics argue that marine mammals are intelligent, social and need
far more space than they get in any enclosure. Studies have shown
they live only half as long in captivity as they do in the wild,
says Michael O'Sullivan, executive director of the Toronto-based
Humane Society of Canada.
"The problem is the miseducation of the public, that it's
okay to take these highly intelligent, social animals from their
families at a young age, put them in concrete boxes and force them
to do silly pet tricks," says Annelise Sorg, president of the
Vancouver-based Coalition for No Whales in Captivity, which helped
persuade that city's aquarium to stop housing killer whales.
Ripley's Masterson says they aren't essential: "We've been
successful without them."
But Fassnacht says the big mammals play an important role in aquariums.
The Shedd, like most others in the U.S., is a non-profit operation
with an educational and political mission: to inspire visitors to
care about Earth's oceans, lakes and rivers, and the creatures that
inhabit them.
It wants its animals to "connect people to the living world,
and no animal in the building does a better job of that than whales
and dolphins. People see these animals and they're completely wowed,"
Fassnacht says.
As long as they get top-quality care and aren't forced into doing
circus stunts, "they become ambassadors for the wild,"
argues Peter Chermayeff of Chermayeff, Sollogub and Poole Inc.,
a Boston architectural firm that specializes in aquarium design
and development.
"They make people care more. When you care, you become another
voice for habitat protection."
Most U.S. aquariums, whether for profit or non-profit, display
dolphins, whales or both, and all have some sort of marine mammals.
That includes two of the "big three": Shedd and Baltimore
National.
The third, Monterey Bay, on a spectacular Pacific coast site, has
none in captivity, but visitors can see them from the aquarium's
deck, cavorting in the animal-rich open ocean.
It's possible to succeed without marine mammals, as a freshwater
aquarium in Chattanooga, Tenn., is proving.
It showcases freshwater marine life from habitats stretching from
the Appalachian Mountains to the Gulf of Mexico. Visitors can see,
for example, how brook trout hide in river eddies then come out
into the current to feed, says Chermayeff, whose firm designed it.
People enjoy learning about environments that seem familiar but
that they don't really know, he says.
Peterson and others point out that aquariums, like any other attraction,
must constantly offer new and exciting exhibits.
Monterey welcomed about 2.5 million visitors in its first year,
then watched as attendance slowly and steadily eroded. The aquarium
began a program of special exhibitions, which are changed regularly,
and brought in a charismatic attraction: the only white shark in
captivity. Annual attendance now averages about 1.8 million.
But anything — even jellyfish or seahorses — can draw visitors
if it's done right, Peterson says.
Backers of Toronto's proposed aquarium say it will attract tourists
and boost the city's western waterfront. But industry observers
have doubts about how much business such a stand-alone project can
bring in.
More crucial than having mammals, they say, is that aquariums be
part of a critical mass of attractions or, at the very least, be
on sites where other development can happen.
"You can't be confident of success standing alone unless you're
very, very good," Chermayeff says.
It's far better, he says, to have "synergies" with other
attractions or features. The ideal is to create a location where
visitors, rather than coming just to see the aquarium, will spend
an entire day or even stay overnight.
That suggests that Toronto's proposed site — a considerable distance
from downtown, hemmed in by roads and railway tracks, and with only
a couple of small, all-year attractions nearby — presents a challenge.
At Exhibition Place, "there is some planning of some other
adjacent development to be considered," Chermayeff says, cautiously.
Experience across North America shows that whether or not aquariums
display whales and dolphins, they rarely succeed on their own, says
John Holer, who owns and operates Marineland, on 400 hectares in
Niagara Falls. At first an aquarium may look successful, he says,
but people visit only once or twice: "They don't want to come
back and see the same thing."
Marineland includes rides, restaurants and other attractions, and
is undergoing another expansion, Holer says. And it's in Niagara
Falls, which is already a tourist mecca.
The Shedd Aquarium — which is the world's largest indoor aquarium
and attracts about 2 million people a year — is close to downtown
Chicago, next to a planetarium and the world-famous Field Museum.
The Art Institute of Chicago is nearby.
The Baltimore National was part of an extensive downtown waterfront
redevelopment. Monterey Bay is on a main tourist route between Los
Angeles and San Francisco. Atlanta is getting a massive new aquarium,
but it's being built along with a Coca-Cola museum.
The Chattanooga aquarium went up in a derelict industrial district,
but it's just nine blocks from the small city's downtown and was
surrounded by developable land. Before long, it attracted three
new hotels, several dozen stores and restaurants and other attractions,
and helped to revive what is now known as the "Environmental
City."
"It helps if everything around you is being developed according
to plan," Peterson says.
All of Ripley's aquariums are near the company's museums and other
features, says spokesperson Tim O'Brien.
Ripley this week broke ground on a $200 million project in Niagara
Falls that will eventually include an aquarium, but only after a
hotel and all-year water park are completed.
Aquariums in Tampa, Fla., Camden, N.J., and Long Beach, Calif.,
ran into financial trouble because development didn't follow them
as quickly as expected.
Financial prospects are difficult to assess, experts say.
Most U.S. aquariums are non-profit organizations or publicly owned,
and were built with large grants from generous donors or government-backed
financing. A few, including Shedd, get part of their operating budget
from the host city.
Toronto's plan is a rare attempt to build an aquarium without government
financing, apart from favourable terms for a 99-year lease on the
property and transit improvements. City officials say they've contacted
about 50 potential builders, but only four private companies operate
large marine exhibits in North America.
City officials expect it would attract at least a million visitors
each year, for an annual operating profit of up to $11 million.
Masterson estimates it would cost more than $100 million to build
and $30,000 a day to operate.
Simple arithmetic using these numbers suggests tickets would have
to cost an average of about $20, just to cover operating costs and
the forecast profit. More would probably be needed to repay the
construction investment.
The main thing, the experts say, is to do an aquarium well.
"You have to have a very clear vision of what you're planning
to do" as well as "a really conservative financial plan,"
Peterson says.
Despite the potential problems, Chermayeff — who was involved in
some of the previous attempts to launch a Toronto aquarium — is
optimistic.
"Toronto will respond to a world-class aquarium very well,"
he says. "It's a great place for this to happen."
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