A state-of-the-art zoo is officially coming to Elk Grove after nearly four years of discussion, planning and negotiations.
Elk Grove City Council approved the long-anticipated decision Wednesday to relocate the Sacramento Zoo in Land Park, where it has been since it first opened in 1927, to Elk Grove.
It was a full house inside the Elk Grove City Council chambers as dozens of people filled with anticipation cheered following a historic vote to construct a new zoo at a cost of $302 million, a decision that the city projects would bring upwards of a million visitors per year to Elk Grove and generate an estimated $249 million over five years.
The planned zoo in Elk Grove will have a dedicated 103 acres of land near Lotz Parkway and Kammerer Road, west of Highway 99 near Sky River Casino, specifically to relocate and expand the zoo.
The move allows capacity for more animals and more space for larger animals. Over 65 acres of the 103 acres will be home to more than 400 different animals, including a 23-acre African savanna feature that will showcase rhinos, giraffes, lions and cheetahs.
The new zoo’s main facility would be larger than the Houston Zoo in its entirety, which occupies 55 acres, and the Fresno Chaffee Zoo at 45 acres. By comparison, the current Land Park location sits on 14.7 acres.
“People are excited about this,” Elk Grove Mayor Bobbie Singh-Allen said at Wednesday’s city council meeting. “There’s a lot of buzz out there…I know I personally am committed to working with the Zoological Society to be successful. I’m investing in our city to say, ‘yes, we can. Yes, we will.’”
Community members chime in
All around, Elk Grove officials, residents and visitors are elated to receive the latest zoo news, following the announcement during the city council meeting.
People gathered in Elk Grove with Sacramento Zoo swag such as headbands made from of paper and designed as animal ears, and stickers that read “I support a new zoo in Elk Grove.”
At least 40 people opted to speak at public comment during Wednesday’s council meeting, regarding the zoo. Most were ecstatic at the idea of a new zoo in Elk Grove.
Maggie Ellis, a 5th grade teacher at Carroll Elementary School, said she sent an email, surveying the interest in the new zoo, to numerous educators throughout the Elk Grove Unified School District.
She reported that more than 80% of educators responded that they would be interested in the zoo for educational reasons, and over 85% were interested for personal reasons.
Randy Rojas, who spoke at Wednesday’s council meeting during public comment, said that when contemplating a zoo trip, he and his family would visit the San Francisco Zoo.
With the introduction of a new zoo in Elk Grove, Rojas said his family can begin a new chapter visiting a zoo in their home region.
One speaker, resident Michael Monasky opposed the decision regarding the zoo.
“It’s poor land use resulting in loss of lands as well as open space for wildlife,” Monasky said. “It’s based upon a political economic policy which chooses to ignore the future… what I don’t want to have happen is that we get excited about the shiny new project that results in misprojected projections.”
Other attendees like Kevin Ferreira and Robert Churchill, held posters that read “vote yes”, “zoos are cool” and “WWAZ #WeWantAZoo”.
Ferreira, of the Sacramento Sierra Building and Construction Trades Council, was one of the more than 100 people to fill the Elk Grove City Chambers Wednesday evening.
“We’re here to support the (more than) 2000 jobs that this project will create,” Ferreira said.
Churchill, an Elk Grove resident and a Sacramento Zoo employee, was hopeful that the city would make the decision to relocate the zoo from Land Park to Elk Grove.
“I think it would be a good project for the animals and for the community,” Churchill said.
Landing the zoo in Elk Grove
Sacramento Zoological Society CEO and executive director Jason Jacobs is euphoric about the decision because he knows that Elk Grove wasn’t always the destination for a much-needed upgrade to the region’s zoological park.
“The board voted unanimously in April 2018 to pursue a new zoo,” Jacobs said. “And by September of 2021 we signed our exclusive negotiating deal with the city of Elk Grove. Even before that negotiating, it took three years. We were looking at sites and when we would look at sites, the sites were removed or repurposed for other purposes and there were no other sites. So we reached out to the city of Elk Grove, they had some land and we’ve been working with them ever since. It’s been a great partnership.”
Originally, the Sacramento Zoo was recommended to move to North Natomas Regional Park, according to a 2020 study.
In December 2020, the Sacramento City Council was scheduled to take a vote to endorse that site and permit the zoo to begin fundraising efforts. However, Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg delayed the vote so the city could consider other locations, such as the former site of Sleep Train Arena. Another site considered was the Bing Maloney Golf Course, which would have resulted in closure of the course.
Steinberg ultimately decided to focus on “urgent” priorities for the city, affordable housing and the development in downtown Sacramento’s railyards and along the city’s waterfront in Old Sacramento. The zoo was never reconsidered in Sacramento.
Instead of a state-of-the-art zoo, Elk Grove had discussions of developing a state-of-the-art hospital.
Around the same time Sacramento shifted focus away from keeping the zoo in city limits, Elk Grove was in talks with California Northstate University to develop a 400-bed medical center.
The proposed hospital would have included a 13-story hospital tower east of Interstate 5, an outpatient clinic, a student dorm and two parking garages. The facilities would’ve neighbored the Stone Lakes National Wildlife Refuge and residential communities in the city’s southwest corner. The project was estimated to cost as much as $750 million.
Ultimately, the hospital was vehemently opposed by nearby residents, and the plans were halted in early 2021 after a rejection by the city’s planning commission. Later that year, the city entered an “exclusive negotiation agreement” with the Sacramento Zoological Society to relocate the zoo from Land Park to Elk Grove.
With the CNU project turned away in Elk Grove, discussions opened to move to develop a the hospital and medical center complex in Natomas at the former Sleep Train Arena site. A decision that was made official Tuesday when Sacramento City Council unanimously approved a “non-binding term sheet” for a new financing district to build streets, drainage, and other backbone facilities needed to serve a teaching hospital and higher education campus planned for the site of the former Kings arena in Natomas.
What’s next for the zoo?
Although there is not yet a set opening date, according to the city’s website, Elk Grove and the Sacramento Zoological Society expect the zoo to open by 2029 barring any major delays.
The next steps include completing construction plans, construction time and securing community partnership funding.
Singh-Allen saidthe city is committed to the success of the project.
“I want this to be successful and I want to ensure donor confidence,” Singh-Allen said. “I want this to be a strong message that we are ready to fundraise and make this a reality that Elk Grove can dream big and we’re gonna build that zoo.”
Elk Grove Vice Mayor Rod Brewer said during Wednesday’s meeting the zoo is a beacon of light for Elk Grove.
“The support from the community, not just from Elk Grove, but from the greater Sacramento area and pretty much northern California, gives me goosebumps,” Brewer said. “It really makes you feel good that people have put that much faith in this city. This will be a very, very transparent project. It’s an investment in our community. It’s an investment in Northern California. It is a catalyst for all good things that will come after this.”
The city on its website said it is exploring options for a preview phase in 2027, but no final decisions have been made.
City and zoo officials expect to release their environmental impact report, finance plan and operating agreement later this year.