Vandalur Reserve Forest is a protected area located in the suburb of
Vandalur to the southwestern part of
Chennai, about 30 km from the city centre. It is bordered by the
Grand Southern Trunk (GST) Road in the west and Suddhanandha Bharathi Street on the northern and the eastern sides and is intersected by the Vandalur–Kelambakkam Road on the southern side. The reserve forest contains
Arignar Anna Zoological Park, the largest
zoological garden in the
Indian Subcontinent.
History
In 1976, a portion of the reserve forest covering 1,265 acres (512 ha) was demarcated by the
Tamil Nadu Forest Department as the new location for the Madras Zoo, initially located in
Park Town.[1] Work started in 1979 at an initial cost of ₹ 75 million, and the zoo was opened to public on 24 July 1985 as the Arignar Anna Zoological Park. In 2001, another 92.45 hectares (228.4 acres) of land from the reserve forest, located adjacent to the zoo, was augmented with the zoo to build a rescue and rehabilitation center for confiscated and abandoned wild animals, increasing the zoo's size to 602 hectares (1,490 acres).
Vandalur Reserve Forest is a protected area located in the suburb of
Vandalur to the southwestern part of
Chennai, about 30 km from the city centre. It is bordered by the
Grand Southern Trunk (GST) Road in the west and Suddhanandha Bharathi Street on the northern and the eastern sides and is intersected by the Vandalur–Kelambakkam Road on the southern side. The reserve forest contains
Arignar Anna Zoological Park, the largest
zoological garden in the
Indian Subcontinent.
History
In 1976, a portion of the reserve forest covering 1,265 acres (512 ha) was demarcated by the
Tamil Nadu Forest Department as the new location for the Madras Zoo, initially located in
Park Town.[1] Work started in 1979 at an initial cost of ₹ 75 million, and the zoo was opened to public on 24 July 1985 as the Arignar Anna Zoological Park. In 2001, another 92.45 hectares (228.4 acres) of land from the reserve forest, located adjacent to the zoo, was augmented with the zoo to build a rescue and rehabilitation center for confiscated and abandoned wild animals, increasing the zoo's size to 602 hectares (1,490 acres).