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Libraries Are Any Avid Reader's Second Home

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Core Tip: Libraries (and to an extent, bookshops) are any avid reader’s second home. But they can also be much more than stacks of books—

Libraries (and to an extent, bookshops) are any avid reader’s second home. But they can also be much more than stacks of books—they can be community learning centers, Internet hubs, safe places for kids to go after school, workspaces for freelancers, and non-commercial venues for older folks to gather.

Nerd out in These Stunning, Award-Winning Libraries

To celebrate the new, more varied functionality of libraries, the American Institute of Architects (AIA) and the American Library Association (ALA) recently awarded the 2015 Library Building Awards to those buildings that exemplified this trend:

Hillary Rodham Clinton Children’s Library and Learning Center: Little Rock, Arkansas

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This library looks as sustainable as it is

Polk Stanley Wilcox Architects went way beyond the idea of a library with their design, creating Arkansas’ first holistically imagined children’s education destination. It includes “a performance space, teaching kitchen, greenhouse, vegetable garden, and an arboretum that allows children to cultivate, harvest, prepare meals, and sell produce in a planned farmer’s market,” according to a release.

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A safe community space

Cedar Rapids Public Library: Cedar Rapids, Iowa

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Open space, a sculpture, and banks of windows welcome people into the library

OPN Architects, Inc. designed this library to LEED Platinum requirements, utilizing “abundant natural light, a geothermal system, and daylight harvesting strategies that minimize the building’s energy use.  The green roof and use of permeable pavers across the site allow the building to retain 90% of all annual rainfall on site in underground storm water collection chambers,” according to a release.

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Kid-friendly but not childish decor

Inside, a spacious two-story lobby brings together all of the core patron services in a hub and spoke system. Bright colors and unusual furniture are appealing to kids and kids-at-heart.

Claire T. Carney Library: Dartmouth, Massachusetts

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Like the other designs, here natural light is brought into the stacks

Originally conceived by Paul Rudolph as a centerpiece to this commuter college, the Brutalist building became dysfunctional over time. Amazingly, the university kept the library open during the 2-year redesign and subsequent transformation.

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An unusual color scheme goes way beyond typical library tones

“With half of the collections relocated to basement storage, the creation of a wide variety of new service and collaborative work spaces and the addition of a glass enclosed ‘campus living room’, the Carney Library is now the most popular place on campus, as evidenced by a gate count that has tripled,” according to a release.

Vancouver Community Library: Vancouver, Washington

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Interior and exterior spaces make this library one with its environment

This LEED Gold library is a brand-new five-story building in the city’s core that uses materials to reflect new and historic neighborhoods in Vancouver.

The interior architecture includes built-in signage for easy navigation

Architects Miller Hull decided that the concept for the interior was a “drawer full of knowledge”, which would make accessing the library’s contents easy and would encourage exploration.

Mission Branch Library: San Antonio, Texas

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This library is in keeping with Texas style

Just a single story high, this LEED silver-certified library designed by Muñoz and Company uses all kinds of interesting local materials in its construction.”The exterior of the building features a locally sourced San Saba Sandstone wainscot that wraps the entire perimeter of the white stucco walls,” according to the release. The entrance (above) is via over-sized copper-clad doors embossed with a decorative pattern pulled from Mission San Jose.

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Materials used in construction are representative of the local Mission style

Above, you can see one of three brick bovedas—cross vaults built without centering by local craftsmen. The interior bovedas are echoed in the exterior as well. Tiles and stucco are used inside and out—and you can’t mistake where you are.

Slover Library: Norfolk, Virginia

A former 115-year-old courthouse and city hall were restored—and added to—to create the new Slover Public Library by Newman Architects with Tymoff + Moss.

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A beautiful and modern joining of the old and new buildings of the Slover Library

The combination of old and new structures isn’t hidden but made obvious in the interior of the building, while taking advantage of natural light.

Did today’s featured photos inspire you to visit any of the libraries above?

 
 
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