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Project Chimps' mission is to provide lifelong exemplary care to chimpanzees retired from research.

Chimp with a blanket tied to a stick
Panielle carries a flag she made herself by tying a blanket strip to a stick.
chimpanzee in snow
Ronald explores the snow covered Peachtree Habitat

Project Chimps is the newest chimpanzee sanctuary in the United States and was founded to provide lifelong exemplary care to 200 former research chimpanzees at its sanctuary on 230+ acres of forested land in the Blue Ridge Mountains of north Georgia. Today, Project Chimps is home to 95 chimpanzees and we are working to move nearly 100 more to permanent sanctuary. The sanctuary is occasionally open to the public for special events and group tours.

Our History

September 14, 2015, marked the effective end of unrestricted invasive experiments on chimpanzees in the United States. All chimps, both wild and captive, were listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) on that day, after a decades-long fight to end the use of chimpanzees in laboratory research.

Chimpanzees in private research institutions also needed a forever home. In anticipation of the federal policy change, Project Chimps reached an agreement in 2014 with the University of Louisiana’s New Iberia Research Center (NIRC), which houses the largest population of privately-owned chimpanzees in the United States, to provide sanctuary to all of NIRC’s chimpanzees.

The Humane Society of the United States (The HSUS) led this fight, alongside many other leaders and supporters in the chimpanzee sanctuary community, including founding board member and noted animal law attorney Bruce Wagman. The National Institutes of Health, on the heels of the ESA decision, made a final announcement in November 2015 that it would no longer fund invasive chimpanzee research and would retire all government-owned chimpanzees to the federal sanctuary.

Project Chimps Founders

Project Chimps founding board members Billie Joe and Adrienne Armstrong, along with other notable donors such as HSUS, Rachael Ray, Judy Greer, Marsha Perelman, Elizabeth Bradham, and Kat Von D also made key contributions toward the project’s initial capital needs.

In 2016 we transferred the first group of chimpanzees from NIRC to Project Chimps, and have continued to receive additional groups of chimpanzees in phases. Today, Project Chimps is home to 95 chimpanzees with more groups to come. 

Following the vision laid out in our 2019-2024 Strategic Plan, we are currently planning the sanctuary's Phase 2 expansion. With your help, Project Chimps will eventually house more than 200 chimpanzees!

Kat Von D, Adrienne and Billie Joe Armstrong, Rachael Ray and John Cusimano at Project Chimps.
Kat Von D, Adrienne and Billie Joe Armstrong, Rachael Ray and John Cusimano at Project Chimps.
Latricia was among the first chimpanzees transferred to Project Chimps in September 2016.
Latricia was among the first chimpanzees transferred to Project Chimps in September 2016.

For the research industry, it’s the end of an era, but for these chimpanzees, it’s just the beginning.

You can help bring a chimpanzee from the lab to Project Chimps by donating today.

It's Their Time To Live

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