An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Region R: Savanna Central
Writer: Silverchase
Artist: Tangerine
RMH
Claire Keane
Sade Olutola

Kaledo Art
No title available

if i look back, i am lost
Xuebing Du

ellievsbear
we're not kids anymore.
i don't do bad sauce passes

Origami Around

★
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
DEAR READER

PR's Tumblrdome
wallacepolsom
Misplaced Lens Cap
Monterey Bay Aquarium

titsay
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

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@ztgmap
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Region R: Savanna Central
Writer: Silverchase
Artist: Tangerine
Region B: Harbour St.
Artist: @robcivecat At the west point of Savanna Central, just at the edge of the Rainforest district you can find Harbour Street. Due to the city’s limited motorway system that comes from city planning encouraging citizens of the use of the mass transit system, there was never a need to build bridges over the wide canals that separate the city from the surrounding areas. The city has been using very extended ferry system to connect the city with the rest of the continent. There are 39 ferry piers along the shoreline of zootopia numbered from East to West, and the last two piers are located right at the Harbour Street station which because of that became one of the heavily used point. Hightech and fast catamaran ferries arrive and leave the pier every 10 minutes. Because of the well maintained historic building and great view of the harbor it also became a tourist hotspot, which popularity does not decrease even during the cold winter months.
An ongoing project with several anons, imagining and drawing parts of the city
Here’s Banyon St, in the southern part of Savanna Central/Downtown
Region N: Banyon St
Sorry I’ve not posted anything here for so long, work’s been bullying me lately so I’ve not had much free time to draw, but here’s a little snapshot of Baobab Blvd in Zootopia’s Savanna Central I’ve been working on
Region Q: Baobab Blvd
Artist: Aca
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Region O: Watering Hole
Writer: Otterly
Art: @kamdrawings
/trash/ had an initiative to create some content based on a spot on Zootopia’s map. I picked a neighborhood by the Acacia Street train station in Savanna Central and gave it some backstory.
The Arts Council and the Borough Planning Commission had just finished a yearlong overhaul of South Riverwalk, and to Nick it was like stepping into a totally new city. Yeah, the river was still there, and the Zootopia Loop overpass. But there were two more surface train lines that ran through now, too. South River was bustling with small-scale cargo and even a commuter ferry like the one on Rainforest Arm. Footbridges zagged over the banks; half given over to big green cycling lanes. And there were a lot more mammals around.
One of them, a giraffe bent to an awkward stoop over his cargo bicycle, had an impressive amount of speed coming around the corner. Nick stopped with Judy and their guide at the curb to let him pass. He heard the cheery bell and a hurried “sorry!” and had to smile at the absurdity of it.
“No cars, you were saying?” he asked.
Their guide was Morgan, a diminutive antelope who worked for the city. She laughed at his tone.
“Only on the main artery on Acacia proper. Otherwise they have to park at the commuter lots to the north and south,” she said. “Everywhere else is bicycles and scooters only now. You can see that adoption has gone up.”
Their time down here was part hearts-and-minds operation, part familiarization tour. Bogo liked his officers out and about, down on eye level with residents instead of rolling by in cruisers all the time. And a whole bunch of new pathways, gardens, and bike access routes were new ins and outs that they needed to get their heads around. It was a safety thing.
Judy loved it. He could tell, the way her ears bounced from one thing to the next on their walk. She stopped to admire the intricate civic flowerbeds, leaned out to look down from the bridges and observation decks that stretched over the water, and listened - more eagerly than anyone but Nick would notice - as Morgan described the farmer’s market that had already taken up residence on Saturdays at Confluence Gardens to the north.
He would enjoy it, too, he knew - but only after it stopped feeling weird to see towers of new housing and a swanky new fitness store where there had once been simple rolling green open space and modest riverfront establishments. He wondered, idly, if anything smaller than the elephant-scale warehouses were still where they had used to be.
Region I: Acacia St
Region G: Little Rodentia
Artist: Tangerine, with special thanks to Silverchase
It is a well-understood fact in Zootopia, and beyond, that watchmaking played a significant part in what established Little Rodentia as a full-fledged neighborhood in the city. While it may seem hard to believe now, the rodent population in Zootopia was not significant throughout most of its history: the 1861 census reported only 14,431 of the 'very-small-scale' mammals, and there was no centralized district designated for them. The few rodents living in the city up to that point were thinly spread apart, with the occasional 'neighborhood' of several units built together -- one such example, on Prairie Road, is still mostly intact, and is now a museum and in the Z.T. Register of Historic Places. In 1868, Edward Meadows and Thaddeus Fielder, two voles who had found moderate success up to that point producing prayer nuts, devised the idea of producing mechanical watches to break into the then-burgeoning industry. The two believed that the small and intricate parts that went into assembling a mechanical watch would be a job best suited for the smallest of mammals. Volex was founded the following year, and the two voles began manufacturing and selling pocket watches aimed at size A5 mammals in their Savanna Central warehouse. While mechanics were seen as more suited for larger mammals up to that point, public opinion soon perceiving Volex watches as more precise than any other, and Volex marketing campaigns have taken significant advantage of this since. Demand for the watches skyrocketed, and by 1900, the company was producing as many as 200 watches per day from their factory in Zootopia. The sudden growth of Volex not only began to centralize the city's rodent population, but also brought in significant numbers from outlying regions. The growth called for a designated rodent community, and in 1897, the district of Little Rodentia was officially incorporated.
Pictured: an overhead view of the Volex factory in 1973, with a curious tiger peering over the gate.
With a larger, more centralized rodent population in Zootopia developing, opportunities beyond just watchmaking began to develop. Other items with intricate parts, such as musical boxes, mechanical pencils, mechanical calculators, and even typewriters, saw manufacture in significant numbers by rodents and rodent-founded companies. [...] However, despite Volex's legacy, the days for the company's factory in Little Rodentia would eventually prove to be numbered. While the new factory that began construction in Ratowice in 1974 was intended to be supplemental to the factory in Zootopia, the company reported significant financial issues the following year and announced it would undergo restructuring. That December, the company subsequently announced that their factory in Zootopia would cease operation, speculated as being largely from Zootopia's steep tax for smaller mammals. This decision was met with significant backlash from the community of Little Rodentia, and continues to be the source of controversy. While there were numerous attempts to preserve the entire complex after its closing, it eventually fell into disrepair. In 1994, all but the oldest factory building were demolished.
Despite the fate of the Little Rodentia factory, Volex is still remembered largely for being the catalyst that created the district of Little Rodentia, and for ushering in an age where rodents would be renowned for intricate, precise machinery.
Pictured: Two Volex executives announce the Sorella at an expo in Little Rodentia. Dated April 8, 1972.
Region R: Riverside
Artist: tggeko
Down on Riverside is a park where you can watch the boats coming in and out of the city. Here we have a cheetah motivating her running team.
Current map status 10/7
The /ZTG/ Map project is a collaborative worldbuilding exercise for the zootopia general threads. I've taken the official concept map and divided it into sections. Each participant takes a square and makes some content for it. It can be a drawing of what the area looks like, a story about something in the region, or whatever you can imagine. I've narrowed down the area to just Savanna Central for now, but if this is a success, we can do other regions!
The map will be updated as the regions are claimed.
All posts will be collected here. When you're ready, just submit it there along with which region you picked. Messaging me with a post to reblog also works. If it's a fic, a link is preferred to raw text.
The zootopia subway map, by Matthias Lechner