Origins In 1900,
Lyman Cornelius Smith donated $10,000 and zoological collection to establish a zoo. The first incarnation of the zoo was a small, four
acre facility in
Burnet Park owned and operated by the
Syracuse Department of Parks and Recreation. After opening in 1914, the zoo's first expansion began in 1916 with the construction of stone exhibits for
bears and a
waterfowl pond. By 1933, the zoo had doubled in size, and by in 1955 a
children's zoo and
monkey exhibit had been built. ;Decline The zoo's decline began in the early 1960s as
Syracuse's tax base started to shrink and financial support for the zoo began to erode. In 1974, two teens broke into the zoo and killed and injured several animals. The city's financial position and the break-in fueled public debate over the future of the zoo. In 1970, a volunteer group founded the
Friends of the Burnet Park Zoo and the city received a grant to enlarge the zoo to , add a
boardwalk, a western plains
habitat, and construct a new perimeter
fence. In 1979, the
city of Syracuse transferred control of the zoo to
Onondaga County Parks to determine its future. ;Renewal A study by County Parks staff produced a forty-page renovation plan for the zoo which involved shutting down the old zoo and constructing a new zoo with spacious, naturalistic animal habitats replacing the old cages. The plan was approved by the
Onondaga County legislature in 1981. The old zoo was closed in 1982 and the $13 million project ($10 million of which was provided by the county and the rest by the
Friends of the Burnet Park Zoo) began in 1983. The zoo reopened in 1986 and received its first accreditation from the
Association of Zoos and Aquariums the following year; it has been reaccredited every five years since. In 1998, the zoo initiated a capital campaign to fund its education classrooms as well as the Amur
tiger and Diversity of Birds exhibits. Following a $2 million endowment by the
Rosamond Gifford Charitable Corporation in 1999, the zoo was renamed the
Rosamond Gifford Zoo at
Burnet Park. The next several years saw the construction of a Humboldt
penguin exhibit, Penguin Coast, which was completed in 2005 and features a breeding colony of Humboldt penguins. Since then, the zoo has successfully hatched more than 55 penguin chicks as part of the Species Survival Plan for Humboldt penguins. Since 2010, the Friends of the Zoo has assisted the zoo with capital campaigns to construct Primate Park, an outdoor exhibit where siamang apes, Colobus monkeys and patas monkeys rotate on exhibit in warm weather; the Helga Beck Asian Elephant Preserve, a nearly 7-acre preserve for the zoo's Asian elephant herd; and the Zalie and Bob Linn Amur Leopard Woodland, home to the world's most critically endangered big cats. ==Exhibits==