Kalamazoo Public Library

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Kalamazoo Public Library located in Kalamazoo, Michigan was named National Library of the Year in 2002. It is an independent district library serving about 120,000 people, has a salaried staff of 90 and a budget of about $10 million. The library consists of the "Central" branch in downtown Kalamazoo, four branch libraries, and a bookmobile.

Kalamazoo Public Library Central Branch in downtown Kalamazoo, Michigan
Kalamazoo Public Library Central Branch in downtown Kalamazoo, Michigan

Contents

[edit] History

The original library building in 1959
The original library building in 1959

Kalamazoo Public Library was founded in 1893. The building was Romanesque style, with several wings and towers filled with windows to capture the light. Ulysses Wheaton built the structure, which stood for 65 years.

In 1958, construction began on a new building inspired by LeCorbusier’s “Ville Savoye,” a two-story, 1930s-era building near Paris, whose second level seems to float on columns surrounding a recessed ground floor. Designed by Louis C. Kingscott, Inc., and built by the Miller-Davis Company, the building opened in 1959, and combined the library and a museum.

In 1998, a new 4-story library building opened, which stands today at 315 South Rose Street in downtown Kalamazoo.

[edit] Branches

  • Oshtemo - Located on the west side of Kalamazoo, in Oshtemo Township. The building is the second largest branch, and features most of the features available at the Central branch. The building's architecture is designed in such a way to allude to a castle. "The whimsical new building arose like a medieval village around a castle. Designed to appeal to children and the young at heart, it features colorful, basic geometric forms." Oshtemo branch also houses the bookmobile.
    The Oshtemo Branch of the Kalamazoo Public Library
    The Oshtemo Branch of the Kalamazoo Public Library
  • Eastwood - Located on the east side of Kalamazoo, in Kalamazoo Township. The original east side library was opened in 1912. In 1996, the Eastwood branch took its current form when a new building was constructed.
  • Alma-Powell - Located on the North side of Kalamazoo. In May of 1968 an anonymous gift of $10,000 was received by the Kalamazoo Board of Education for the purpose of establishing a library in the poorest section of town. The library has been in many locations since, but currently is located within the Douglass Community Centre.
  • Washington Square - For more than 75 years, the branch has been a welcomed and welcoming fixture of the Edison Neighborhood.

[edit] Bookmobile

The Kalamazoo Public Library bookmobile service runs 5 days per week, and services 21 stops at stores, schools, housing complexes, and community centres. The bookmobile carries a full collection including current fiction, nonfiction, magazines, paperbacks, picture books and easy readers, large print books, CDs, cassettes, and books on tape. Patrons can also place a computer reserve on any material in the library system, and pick it up at their bookmobile stop.

The New Kalamazoo Public Library Bookmobile
The New Kalamazoo Public Library Bookmobile

[edit] Technology

The Kalamazoo Public Library is technology friendly. All of the catalog data is computer based. The library also offers computers for use by patrons for finding books, accessing the internet, playing games, and word processing.

The library also offers computer training classes for those who are not familiar with how to work modern technology, such as the internet and computers.

The library provides a free WiFi network for patrons who bring their own laptop to the library.

[edit] Library of the Year

Kalamazoo Public Library was named "Library of the Year" in 2002 by Thompson-Gale. "The Library of the Year Award honors the library that most profoundly demonstrates outstanding community service."

[edit] External links