And I could not take them over and rebuild them in good conscience with elephants, rhinos and hippos, and proposed a number of options. And that required an awful lot of negotiation. Eventually we came to an agreement and this city agreed to pay for the renovation of the Queens and Prospect Park zoos, which was relatively less expensive than the Central Park Zoo, which is really a major redo, the Central Park Zoo we just rebuilt pretty much from start to finish. And the Central Park Zoo the society would pay a large part of that. And that was made possible by Lila Wallace by Lila Acheson Wallace, who or their husband founded the Reader’s Digest in 1922. The negotiation from that point on did not get less complicated in that we had to meet certain architectural constraints particularly here in Manhattan, because it’s all landmarked. And the space is so small, the Central Park Zoo is only about 5 1/2 acres. So when you take out the spaces for services, and public walks and all there was not a lot of space for animals, never was.