Vancouver Public Library
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Vancouver Public Library | |
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Location | Vancouver, British Columbia |
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Established | 1869 |
Number of branches | 22 |
Collection size | 1,300,000+ |
Members | 395,000 |
Website | Vancouver Public Library |
Funded by the City of Vancouver, the Vancouver Public Library is the third largest public library system in Canada, with over 395,000 cardholders and more than 8 million item borrowings annually. The central branch opened in downtown Vancouver on May 26, 1995 and cost 106.8 million CAD to build. It currently holds over 1.3 million items.
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[edit] Vancouver Library Square
Consolidating Vancouver's Central Public Library, Federal Office Tower, and retail and service facilities, the Library Square occupies a city block in the eastward expansion of downtown Vancouver. Centered on the block, the library volume is a seven-story rectangular box containing book stacks and services, surrounded by a free-standing, elliptical, colonnaded wall featuring reading and study areas that are accessed by bridges spanning skylit light wells. The library's internal glass facade overlooks an enclosed concourse formed by a second elliptical wall that defines the east side of the site. This generous, glass-roofed concourse serves as an entry foyer to the library and the more lively pedestrian activities at ground level. Public spaces surrounding the library form a continuous piazza with parking located below grade. The building's exterior is often said to resemble a Roman Colosseum.
The Library Square Project was the largest capital project ever undertaken by the City of Vancouver. The decision to build the project came after a favourable public referendum in November 1990. The City then held a design competition to choose a design for the new building. The design by Moshe Safdie was by far the most radical design and yet was the public favourite. The inclusion of the office tower in the design was required in order to pay for it and as part of a deal with the federal government to obtain the land; the federal government has a long term lease on the high rise office tower portion of the project. Construction began in early 1993 and was completed in 1995. The general contractor was PCL Construction. Moshe Safdie had partnered with the local architect Downs/Archambault on this project. The company that made the actual stonework was Architectural Precast Structures or APS.
In addition to its function as the central branch of the city's public library system, the one square block project also includes an attached office high-rise, retail shops, restaurants, and underground public parking. The Library building has a rooftop garden designed by Vancouver landscape architect Cornelia Oberlander. As of 2006 the garden was closed to the public.
[edit] Location
The building is located in the eastern portion of the Vancouver Central Business District. The address of the library is 350 West Georgia Street, and the Federal office tower is addressed at 300 West Georgia Street. Level 8 and 9 are leased to the Provincial government. Their address is 360 West Georgia
The Square is bordered by Robson Street, Homer Street, West Georgia Street, and Hamilton Street. Across West Georgia Street is Canada Post. Across Hamilton Street is the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Across Homer street is the Centre for Performing Arts (formerly the Ford Centre for Performing Arts) also designed by Moshe Safdie as a complementary building to library square.
[edit] Transportation
[edit] Bus and Skytrain
There are many local bus routes that route past Library Square including the 5, 6, 8, 15, 17, and 20. (See the List of bus routes in Greater Vancouver)
The two nearest SkyTrain stations are Granville Station and Stadium-Chinatown Station and are each within a few blocks of Library Square.
[edit] Bicycle Access
Library Square has three public use bike rack stations:
- One on Hamilton by the Federal Office Tower (between Georgia and the Library's book drop)
- One on Georgia by the Library Square Public House (a street level restaurant/pub in the Federal Office Tower)
- One on the South Plaza (off Homer Street near Robson Street)
The South Plaza station is the better-used and visible spot. It is also the largest and will accommodate more bicycles than the other two stations.
View bike rack locations with Google Maps
[edit] One Book, One Vancouver
One Book, One Vancouver is a city-wide book club sponsored by the Vancouver Public Library. Titles are selected by the library staff, who vote for one of four titles presented by the One Book, One Vancouver Organizing Committee.
- 2002: The Jade Peony - Wayson Choy
- 2003: Stanley Park - Timothy Taylor
- 2004: The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power - Joel Bakan
- 2005: Obasan - Joy Kogawa
- 2006: There is a Season: A Memoir in a Garden - Patrick Lane
- 2007: My Year of Meats - Ruth Ozeki
- 2008: The Five Books of Moses Lapinsky - Karen X. Tulchinsky
[edit] Image Gallery
[edit] Statistics
Library building (including retail, daycare, and parking)
- 9 stories
- 37,000 square metres (398,000 square feet)
- the 1.5 million books, periodicals, and other reference materials are moved through the building by vertical and horizontal conveyors
- 51 km of cable are laid throughout the building, including a fibre optic backbone
- seating capacity: 1200+
- 700+ parking stalls and many bicycle racks
- top 2 floors currently leased by the British Columbia government and scheduled for future library expansion
- approximate cost: CAD $107 million
High-rise
- currently occupied by the Canadian government
- approximate cost: CAD $50 million
[edit] Trivia
Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- The building has appeared in the movies The 6th Day, Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever, and The Game, as well as in episodes of television series including Battlestar Galactica, TekWar and Smallville.
- The rooftop garden contained in the original blueprints and shown in postcards and photographs, although shown covered in plantings, was never completed and is only accessible via a ladder from the eighth floor.
- Designed by the same architect, the downtown location of the Salt Lake City Public Library has a very similar design. This is clearly apparent in the main foyer and the sweeping outer facade
- The Vancouver Public Library was closed from July 26 to October 23, 2007 due to a strike by CUPE 391, the library staff's union. This was the first time the library union had been on strike in its 77 year existence.
[edit] External links
- Official web site
- VPL online catalogue search
- Information and photo gallery at the Canadian Architecture Collection
- Library Square Rooftop Garden (British Columbia Society of Landscape Architects - Sitelines Web Atlas)
- CUPE 391 Union representing employees of the Vancouver Public Library