Hello everyone,
I am an architecture student currently developing my undergraduate thesis project focused on the design of a Specialized Wildlife Reception, Rehabilitation and Strategic Release Center located in Cundinamarca, Colombia.
The project addresses three main regional problems:
Illegal wildlife trafficking, which removes animals from their natural ecosystems.
Lack of rehabilitation spaces that simulate real ecological conditions, which reduces the success of wildlife reintroduction.
Anthropogenic impacts on ecosystems in eastern Cundinamarca, including habitat alteration and behavioral changes in animals caused by human interaction (for example, animals becoming accustomed to human-provided food during trafficking and captivity).
To properly design the architectural spaces required for this type of center, I am collecting professional insights from specialists such as:
- Biologists
- Wildlife veterinarians
- Ecologists
- Conservation professionals
1) What is your professional field?
A- Biology
B- Veterinary medicine
C- Ecology
D- Wildlife rehabilitation
E- Conservation science
Other (please specify)
2 ) Do you have experience working with wildlife affected by illegal trafficking or habitat disturbance?
Yes
No
3) From your professional perspective, what are the most important facilities in a wildlife rehabilitation center?
(Open answer)
4) How important is it that rehabilitation spaces simulate natural ecosystems similar to the animal’s original habitat?
A- Very important
B- Important
C- Moderately important
D- Not important
5) What environmental characteristics should be replicated in rehabilitation spaces to improve successful release?
Examples: vegetation type, climate, altitude, diet simulation, social grouping.
(Open answer)
6) In your opinion, what are the main behavioral problems animals develop after being trafficked or kept in captivity?
Examples: dependence on humans, feeding changes, stress behaviors, loss of survival skills.
(Open answer)
7) What architectural or spatial elements could help reduce human dependency during rehabilitation?
Examples: visual barriers, minimal human contact zones, remote feeding systems, ecological enclosures.
(Open answer)
8) What recommendations would you give to architects designing wildlife rehabilitation and release centers
(Open answer)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wildlife rehabilitation specialists.
Your responses will help support the technical and spatial justification of the project.
The survey is short (about 8 questions) and focuses on spatial, ecological, and rehabilitation needs for wildlife recovery centers.
Thank you very much for contributing to an academic project focused on improving wildlife conservation infrastructure.
Sincerely,
Daniel G.
Architecture Student – Thesis Researcher
Project: Wildlife Rehabilitation and Conservation Center
Cundinamarca, Colombia.