| Honolulu Zoo | |
|---|---|
Main Entrance | |
![]() Interactive map of Honolulu Zoo | |
| 21°16′15″N157°49′09″W / 21.2709°N 157.8192°W /21.2709; -157.8192 | |
| Location | Honolulu,Hawaiʻi, United States |
| Land area | 42 acres (17 ha)[1] |
| No. of animals | 1,230 |
| Annual visitors | 750,000+[2] |
| Memberships | Association of Zoos and Aquariums |
| Website | www |
TheHonolulu Zoo is a 42-acre (17 ha)zoo inQueen Kapiʻolani Park inHonolulu,Hawaiʻi. It is the only zoo in the United States to be established by grants made by asovereign monarch and is built on part of the 300-acre (121 ha) royalQueen Kapiʻolani Park. The Honolulu Zoo features over 1,230 animals in specially designed habitats.
Over 750,000 people visit the zoo annually. The zoo is administered by the City & County of Honolulu through the Department of Enterprise Services. Its support agency, the Honolulu Zoo Society (HZS), provides program services for the zoo.[1] The zoo's accredited membership of theAssociation of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) was dropped in 2016 but reinstated in 2020.[3][4]
In 1876, KingKalākaua made royal lands near the slopes ofLē‘ahi available for the establishment of a grand public park for the people of hiskingdom. Two hundred subscribers to the king's project formed the Kapiʻolani Park Association for the purpose of pursuing the mission. In 1877, the marshes, ponds and lagoons in the area were beautified, and it was opened as Queen Kapiʻolani Park in honor ofQueen Kapiʻolani, wife of Kalākaua.
Even as a public park, King Kalākaua continued using the park as a place for his personal collection of exotic birds and horses. The park brought more exotic animals as it staged theKamehameha Day celebrations and various carnivals and fairs. In 1896, the City & County of Honolulu assumed control of Queen Kapiʻolani Park.
In 1915, the City & County of Honolulu appointed Ben Hollinger to be its Administrator of Parks and Recreation, and Queen Kapiʻolani Park came under his control.[5] Hollinger maintained a fascination with animals and began collecting them to showcase at the park in Waikīkī. The park became home for amonkey, asun bear and severallion cubs. In 1916, a steamship on its way fromAustralia toCanada pulled into port atHonolulu Harbor. On board was anAfrican elephant named Daisy. Hollinger pleaded with the City & County of Honolulu to purchase the elephant, which they did. With the acquisition of the elephant, from live animal traderEllis S. Joseph, Honolulu officially had a zoo. Daisy entertained visitors at the park until 1933, when Daisy was killed byHonolulu Police Department officers after she trampled her trainer, George Conradt, to death.
During theGreat Depression, the Honolulu Zoo was almost shut down for lack of finances. Even through the difficulty, it expanded its collection on November 29, 1949, with the purchase of an elephant, aBactrian camel,sea lions, severalbird species,spider monkeys and atortoise. The Honolulu Zoo continued to operate in disrepair.
In 1974, the Honolulu Zoo accepted a donation of acamel, anelephant,chimpanzees anddeer. These donations renewed Honolulu's enthusiasm to revive their zoo. The City & County of Honolulu approved a master plan that determined the boundaries of the present 42-acre (17 ha) site at the north end of Queen Kapiʻolani Park. The animal collection, increased by purchase, trade and donations, was housed in newly constructed facilities, some of which still provide foundations for newer exhibits. The facility designs were influenced by the exhibits of theSan Diego Zoo inCalifornia.
The Honolulu Zoo experienced another revival of enthusiasm in the 1990s as the exhibits were redesigned to feature more natural settings for the animals on display.
The Zoo launched a new online digital ticketing system in November 2025.[6]
Art throughout the Honolulu Zoo includes:
The zoo has worked on conserving native Hawaiian species while also working with other organizations focused on conservation. Conservation has included theKamehameha butterfly,crocodile monitor lizards,birds-of-paradise,African wild dogs, sloths, and thenene, which is the state bird of Hawaii. When only oneAmastra cylindrica snail was found in the wild in 2015, the zoo worked on bringing the numbers of the snail up with over 140 snails reintroduced into the wild.[7]