The Veterinarian's Role in Exhibit Design and Development: A Panel Presentation and Discussion
Sharks! Frogs! Jellies! The titles of our new exhibits scream off of billboards, magazine and newspaper pages, radios and TV ads. Attracting people to our facilities has never been just about a return on mission--return on investment has always been a significant driver as well. With these two sometimes conflicting goals in mind, the dynamic and evermore complicated exhibit development process has increasingly important roles for veterinarians to play.
Regardless of how well designed an exhibit is, strip away the glitzy graphics and what do you find? Animals. It's not surprising that those in our profession focus their attention on the residents of new exhibits. Yet veterinarians who work in this arena find quickly that their practice is about much more than just medicine and animals. There is an important role for clinicians in everything from "blue sky" exhibit design to "value engineering"; from animal selection, to collection, to de-accession; and from cost containment to animal containment.
This session will highlight emerging exhibit concepts and associated challenges and solutions. Panelists will address specific issues and put context around the role that veterinarians play in the exhibit development process.
Whether working in a small facility, or one that rolls out annual blockbusters, consider how your voice as an aquarium or zoo veterinarian is being heard on these topics:
Exhibit concept
Exhibit design
Story line development
Lighting and lighting schedule
Ambient sound management
Life-support system design and build out
Schedule of construction, animal acclimation and opening
System commissioning (testing LSS equipment, seeding filters, establishing test parameters, etc)
Animal selection
Animal sourcing
Quarantine protocols
Animal holding
Mixed-species exhibits
Animal contact programs
Use of exhibit space for additional programming
Special events--evening events, catering
Media events
Pest management