Nürnberg Zoo sprawls across 67 hectares of wooded parkland in the city's northeast, close to the Reichswald forest, and that leafy setting gives the whole place a slower, more spacious feel than many European zoos of similar age.
Founded in 1912, it has had well over a century to mature, and the grounds show it — broad paths, old trees providing genuine shade, and enclosures that have been progressively updated, though a handful of older-style structures still linger if you look for them.
The Delfinarium is the centrepiece and the one exhibit that draws real queues. Nürnberg holds one of Europe's larger managed dolphin populations, and the shows run several times daily. Dolphin shows remain genuinely controversial in animal welfare circles, and it is worth knowing that going in rather than arriving without expectations.
More straightforwardly impressive is the manatee house, one of very few facilities in the world where West Indian manatees are kept and, crucially, where successful breeding has occurred. Watching these enormous, slow-moving animals glide through warm greenish water is quietly extraordinary. The African savanna section brings giraffe, zebra and white rhino into a shared landscape that feels relatively generous in scale.
The zoo participates in multiple European Endangered Species Programmes, with manatees, snow leopards and bongo antelope among the managed species. Conservation credentials here are genuine, if not the institution's loudest selling point.
Getting there is easy: U1 or U11 to Tiergarten, about fifteen minutes from the city centre. Budget a full day if you have children, a comfortable half-day for adults focused on key exhibits. Go early on weekends to secure a reasonable spot for the Delfinarium shows, and bring water — the savanna area has little shade at midday in summer.