THE INFINITE JOURNEY

You are the protagonist

The new expansion is inspired by the historic first circumnavigation of the world carried out by Juan Sebastián Elcano and the men of the ship Victoria. Just like the Spanish explorers did, the expansion will allow visitors to discover the rich biodiversity of Central and South American reefs, rivers and jungles, thus promoting greater awareness and appreciation for their conservation. The park's design accurately reproduces these habitats, offering an immersive and educational experience that connects the history of the discovery of nature in the New World, in a tour of reefs, navigation rooms, a cabinet of curiosities, Amazonian aquariums and a large aviary in which, through collapsed cenotes, you reach a Mayan pyramid.
Plaza training of
A large terrarium that will house the Komodo dragon hatchlings Say goodbye to the Indonesian jungles. We are at a transition point between the current route of the park and the beginning of the Journey to Infinity that the new project recreates.

Visitors will enter the
cosmography from the Bronze Age to the Renaissance, symbolized by an 8-meter-high armillary sphere and the recreation of the celestial disk of Nebra and the map of the Copernicus system.
Sala Aquariums saltwater
In this dark room full of the life of the seas and reefs that welcomed the first Spanish navigators when they arrived in America, the journey begins. Behind large saltwater aquariums they recreate the continuous vision of a reef. Dozens of types of anemones, gorgonians and corals will provide shelter for fish and invertebrates of the reef.

The room, inspired by an old shipyard,
It is presided over by the recreation of the globe by the German Martin Behaim, the first globe in history, and a painting of the Virgin of Victory of Seville, a virgin to whom the members of Magellan's expedition entrusted themselves before beginning the expedition and which gave its name to the only ship of the same that arrived safely in Seville after making the first circumnavigation of the world.
Room of the Navigation
The journey continues towards the interior of the American continent, through a museum hall dedicated to navigation, crowned with a Catalan vault of 'Piranesi' inspiration.

The visitor can see frescoes from the ships of the expedition, 7 cartographic elements, letters from Elcano and Magellan or a facsimile of Miller's Atlas, among other elements.
Room of the bromeliads
With this space begins the approach to the first South American jungles. The lush vegetation makes its way with a large collection of bromeliads on an Amazonian river. In the living room, The visitor can enjoy two large freshwater aquariums where dozens of species of fish and invertebrates live; a space in which nature and art coexist again. Different species of American bromeliads, the theming with sculpted, modeled and treated concrete and mural paintings envelop the visitor, transporting them to distant jungles.
Cabinet of the Curiosities
The museum essence is reflected in spaces like this. Visitors encounter a reproduction of a chamber of wonders. On a Renaissance coffered ceiling, a period piece of furniture contains skeletons and shells, horns of supposed unicorns, bones that were supposed to belong to cyclops and giants, herbalists and albarelos from the first apothecaries, fossils and collections of insects, books and scales to weigh spices. , herbariums and taxidermies of legendary or then unknown animals; wonders that served to promote science and knowledge of the natural world.

The space dedicated to spices stands out here, authentically the economic engine of the 15th and 16th centuries.
room of discovery
The trip itself takes center stage. The art pays tribute to the Spanish sailors and their exploits. The nature and cultures of a new world are opened to the public. Large murals and two enormous globes – one of them, a recreation of Leonardo Da Vinci – accompany the visitor who discovers the navigation routes of the first trip around the world. An aquarium shows axolotls, a species described by Brother Bernardino de Sahagún, representing the study and knowledge of the first Spaniards who arrived in New Spain. In a gigantic aquarium, at the bottom of which you can see the ruins of a Mayan temple, andThe visitor will see the largest freshwater fish in South America, the arapaimas, along with rays and paddlefish. The room bids farewell to the image of the Virgin of Victory of Malaga, the first representation of the Virgin of Victory and patron saint of the province.
Tunnel Zóbel's vision
underwater
Through an underwater corridor you access the Mayan world through an underwater viewing tunnel where giant arapaimas surround the visitor and, through which, The recreation of a sunken Mayan temple after the collapse of a cenote is contemplated.
Aviary y
Maya world
Un The 14-meter-high aviary contains a jungle in which species of birds and Central and South American mammals will coexist where the visitor is immersed in the interior of the Yucatan jungle. The recreation of the Mayan pyramid of Muyil presides over the itinerary. The tour continues following the bed of an Amazonian river that will house diverse and symbolic species such as piranhas, lizard fish, leaf fish, motor rays as well as crocodile lizards, among others.

The experience ends in the temple itself at Xibalbá gate, the Mayan underworld and discovering a watercourse where giant Amazon otters, the largest in the world, live.
Animals
Golden marmosets, Goeldi and emperors; White-faced sakis, sloths, giant otters, blue-throated conures, muitú guans, axolotls, clownfish, damselfishes, surgeonfish, harpaimas, red-bellied piranhas and river rays are some of the species that the visitor will be able to see.