Vancouver Public Library

Last updated

Vancouver Public Library
VPL logo (Nov 2020).svg
Vancouver Public Library
Location Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Established1869
Architect(s) Moshe Safdie / DA Architects + Planners [1] :262
Branches21
Collection
Items collectedbusiness directories, phone books, maps, government publications, books, periodicals, genealogy, local history
Size9.5 million (physical and digital) [2]
Access and use
Circulation10.4 million [3]
Population served675,000 (2024)
Members236,068 (2023) [4]
Other information
Budget$59,331,613 (2023) [3]
Employees900
Website www.vpl.ca

Vancouver Public Library (VPL) is the public library system for the city of Vancouver, British Columbia. In 2023, VPL had more than 4.6 million visits with patrons borrowing nearly 10.4 million items including: books, ebooks, CDs, DVDs, video games, newspapers and magazines. Across 21 locations and online, VPL serves over 236,000 active members and is the largest public library system in British Columbia.

Contents

Services

The Vancouver Public Library includes a large collection of books and digital content. The library provides community information, programs for children, youth, and adults, and delivery to homebound individuals. In addition, the library also provides access to information and reference services, text databases, interlibrary loan services.

One Book, One Vancouver

One Book, One Vancouver was a citywide book club sponsored by the Vancouver Public Library. Titles were selected by the library staff, who voted on one of four titles presented by the One Book, One Vancouver Organizing Committee. It was discontinued after 2010.

History

In January 1869, the manager of the Hastings Mill, J.A. Raymur, started the New London Mechanics Institute, a meeting room and library for mill employees. In March 1869, it was renamed the Hastings Literary Institute, in honour of Rear Admiral the Honourable George Fowler Hastings. No official records of the Hastings Literary Institute have survived, but it is known that membership was by subscription. The Hastings Literary Institute continued to exist until the Granville area was incorporated as part of the new City of Vancouver on 6 April 1886.

Following the Great Vancouver Fire on 13 June 1886, 400 books from the now-defunct Hastings Literary Institute were donated to the newly established Vancouver Reading Room. In December 1887, the Reading Room opened at 144 West Cordova Street, above the Thomas Dunn and Company hardware store. It was also known as the Vancouver Free Library and the Vancouver Free Reading Room and Library.

By the late 1890s, the Free Reading Room and Library in the YMCA Building on West Hastings had become overcrowded. During this period, the American industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie was giving money to cities and towns to build libraries. In 1901, the City of Vancouver approached Carnegie about donating money for a new library to replace the space in the YMCA Building.

The Vancouver Carnegie Library was completed in 1903. The building was used as the main branch of the public library until 1957. The Carnegie Branch is currently located in the building. Vancouver Carnegie.jpg
The Vancouver Carnegie Library was completed in 1903. The building was used as the main branch of the public library until 1957. The Carnegie Branch is currently located in the building.

In 1901, American steel magnate, Andrew Carnegie agreed to donate $50,000 to build a city library if Vancouver would provide free land and $5,000 annually to support its operation. A fight immediately developed between East and West side Vancouver as to who would get the new cultural institution. A public plebiscite fixed the site at Hastings and Westminster (now Main) Streets, next door to the first City Hall. The cornerstone was laid by the Grand Lodge of the Masonic Order on 29 March 1902 and under it were placed Masonic documents, a copy of the city's Act of Incorporation, lists of various officials and examples of the postage stamps and coins then in use. The building was designed by Vancouver architect George Grant and is in the style of Romanesque Renaissance, with a domed Ionic portico and French mansard roof. Granite for the foundation came from Indian Arm and sandstone for the 10" thick walls came from Gabriola Island. A fantastic marble, spiral staircase was built by Albion Iron Works of Victoria. It cost $2.279 million and 9,888 pounds of steel and iron were used. A large multi-panel stained glass window with 3 smaller windows below was designed and crafted by N.T. Lyon of Toronto. Depicted in the windows are John Milton, William Shakespeare, Robert Burns, Sir Walter Scott, Sir Thomas More, [6] and Edmund Spenser. [7] The 3 small windows were removed in 1958 when the library was converted into the museum. They were missing for many years but were located intact and returned to the building in 1985. Inside was hardwood panelled walls and ceilings and oak floors. The rooms were heated by eight fireplaces. There were special reading rooms for ladies and for children, a chess room, newspaper reading room, picture gallery, lecture hall, and on the third floor the Art, Historical and Scientific Association (now called the Vancouver Museum). The library opened in November 1903. [8] This branch is now primarily used as a community centre for residents of the Downtown East Side neighbourhood.

VPL moved its Central branch location from the Carnegie Library to 750 Burrard Street in 1957. The building was used as the Central branch until 1995. 2010-08 750 Burrard Street.jpg
VPL moved its Central branch location from the Carnegie Library to 750 Burrard Street in 1957. The building was used as the Central branch until 1995.

The Vancouver Public Library continued to occupy the Hastings and Main site until the opening of a new central library at 750 Burrard Street in 1957. The move from the Carnegie site to the new location at 750 Burrard began in mid-October 1957, and the official opening of the new library was held on 1 November 1957. The library remained at the Burrard building until 22 April 1995, when it closed in preparation for the move to a new location at Library Square (350 West Georgia Street). The central branch opened in Downtown Vancouver on 26 May 1995 and cost CAD $106.8 million to build.

In September 2009, the library cancelled a room booking made by the group Exit International to hold a workshop by Philip Nitschke about assisted suicide. The cancellation came despite months of negotiation between Exit and library administration. The library stated that it had received a legal opinion stating the workshop as described could contravene Canada's Criminal Code, but would not make the opinion public. [9] The workshop was held at Vancouver's Unitarian Church. [10] "Whatever the reasons of the library were, it's obviously not affecting the decision by the Unitarian Church," Dr. Nitschke said. David Eby, executive director of the BC Civil Liberties Association, which failed to get the ban lifted, said "Usually, librarians are our closest allies in this free-speech debate." [11]

City librarians

  • George Pollay (1887–1890) [12]
  • James Edwin Machin (1892–1910) [12] [13]
  • Alfred E. Goodman (1910) [13] [14]
  • Robert Waite Douglas, city librarian (1911–1924) [15]
  • Edgar Stewart Robinson, director (1924–1957) [16]
  • Peter Grossman, director (1957–1969) [17]
  • Morton P. Jordan, director (1970–1978)
  • George C. Wootton, director (1979–1983) [18]
  • Aileen Tufts, director (1984–1987)
  • Madge Aalto, director (1988–2003)
  • Paul Whitney, city librarian (2003–2010) [19]
  • Sandra Singh, chief librarian (2010–2018) [20]
  • Christina de Castell, chief librarian (2018–present) [21]

Branches

Children at Kitsilano Branch Library, opened in 1927 Children at Kitsilano Library VPL 10442 (10565032584).jpg
Children at Kitsilano Branch Library, opened in 1927

In 1927, the first permanent branch was opened in Kitsilano (2375 West Fourth Avenue). Sixteen years later, in 1943, the second branch, Kerrisdale (Forty-second Avenue and West Boulevard), came into service. Other branches followed throughout the years, with the last branch, the Terry Salman Branch, opening in 2011. [22] The Strathcona Branch, which shared its collection and facilities with Lord Strathcona Elementary School, was removed from the system in 2016, pending the opening of the nə́c̓aʔmat ct [23] Strathcona Branch. The new branch opened in the same community in 2017. [24]

Entrance to the Kensington branch. Kensington is one of 21 VPL branches. Vancouver Public Library Kensington Branch 03.jpg
Entrance to the Kensington branch. Kensington is one of 21 VPL branches.

The Vancouver Public Library system now consists of 21 branches situated throughout the city. The administration centre, and also the largest branch, known as the Central Branch, is located at Library Square in downtown Vancouver.

The oldest existing branch, the Kitsilano branch, is the regional reference library for the North Area division of the Libraries. [25]

Central branch

Consolidating Vancouver Public Library's Central Branch, Federal Office Tower, and retail and service facilities, the Library Square occupies a city block in Downtown Vancouver. Centred on the block, the library is a nine-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 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. Levels 8 and 9 were previously leased to the Provincial government. Their address was 360 West Georgia Street.

VPL Central branch internal glass facade overlooks an enclosed concourse formed by a second elliptical wall that defines the east side of the site. This 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 resembles the current appearance of the Colosseum in Rome. [26]

Adjacent to the Central Branch is Library Square, a public 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 CBC Regional Broadcast Centre Vancouver. Across Homer street is The Centre in Vancouver for the Performing Arts, (formerly The Ford Centre for the Performing Arts) designed by Moshe Safdie as a complementary building to library square. 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. [1] :262 The design by Safdie and DA Architects was by far the most radical design and yet was the public favourite. 70% of the public liked the Safdie scheme as a "unique, imaginative, exciting, interesting building." [1] :263 The inclusion of the 21 story 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. In the year following the new library's opening, library visitors increased by 800,000. [1] :264

In addition to its function as the central branch of the city's public library system, the one square block project 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. The roof garden is accessible by the public. The new 8,000-sq-ft rooftop garden and the expansion to Level 9 were built at a cost of $15.5 million; they opened to the public in September 2018. The expansion is LEED Gold CIv1 certified, managed by Light House Sustainable Building Centre. [27]

The Central branch of Vancouver Public Library is located in Downtown Vancouver. Vancouver Library on robson street.jpg
The Central branch of Vancouver Public Library is located in Downtown Vancouver.
VPL Central branch internal glass facade overlooks an enclosed concourse formed by an elliptical wall Vancouver Public Central Library (36907920883).jpg
VPL Central branch internal glass facade overlooks an enclosed concourse formed by an elliptical wall

Statistics

Library building (including retail and parking)

  • 9 stories
  • 37,000 square metres (398,000 square feet)
  • 1.3 million books, periodicals, and other reference materials are moved through the building by vertical and horizontal conveyors
  • 51 km of cables are laid throughout the building, including a fibre optic backbone
  • seating capacity: 1,200+
  • 700+ parking stalls and a few bicycle racks
  • Top two floors were leased by the Government of British Columbia until 2015 and are now part of the library. They include meeting space, study space, roof garden and exhibition space.
  • Approximate cost: CAD $107 million

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vancouver</span> City in British Columbia, Canada

Vancouver is a major city in western Canada, located in the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia. As the most populous city in the province, the 2021 Canadian census recorded 662,248 people in the city, up from 631,486 in 2016. The Metro Vancouver area had a population of 2.6 million in 2021, making it the third-largest metropolitan area in Canada. Greater Vancouver, along with the Fraser Valley, comprises the Lower Mainland with a regional population of over 3 million. Vancouver has the highest population density in Canada, with over 5,700 inhabitants per square kilometre (15,000/sq mi), and the fourth highest in North America.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Moshe Safdie</span> Israeli-Canadian-American architect (born 1938)

Moshe Safdie is an architect, urban planner, educator, theorist, and author. He is known for incorporating principles of socially responsible design throughout his six-decade career. His projects include cultural, educational, and civic institutions; neighborhoods and public parks; housing; mixed-use urban centers; airports; and master plans for existing communities and entirely new cities in the Americas, the Middle East, and Asia. Safdie is most identified with designing Marina Bay Sands and Jewel Changi Airport, as well as his debut project Habitat 67, which was originally conceived as his thesis at McGill University. He holds legal citizenship in Israel, Canada, and the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Boston Public Library</span> Library in Massachusetts, US

The Boston Public Library is a municipal public library system in Boston, Massachusetts, founded in 1848. The Boston Public Library is also Massachusetts' Library for the Commonwealth, meaning all adult residents of the state are entitled to borrowing and research privileges, and the library receives state funding. The Boston Public Library contains approximately 24 million items, making it the third-largest public library in the United States behind the federal Library of Congress and New York Public Library, which is also privately endowed. In 2014, the library held more than 10,000 programs, all free to the public, and lent 3.7 million materials.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">University of British Columbia</span> Public university in Canada

The University of British Columbia (UBC) is a public research university with campuses near Vancouver and Kelowna, in British Columbia, Canada. Established in 1908, it is the oldest university in British Columbia. With an annual research budget of $747.3 million, UBC funds 9,675 projects annually in various fields of study within the industrial sector, as well as governmental and non-governmental organizations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kitsilano</span> Neighbourhood of Vancouver in British Columbia, Canada

Kitsilano is a neighbourhood located in the city of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Kitsilano is named after Squamish chief August Jack Khatsahlano, and the neighbourhood is located in Vancouver's West Side along the south shore of English Bay, between the neighbourhoods of West Point Grey and Fairview. The area is mostly residential with two main commercial areas, West 4th Avenue and West Broadway, known for their retail stores, restaurants and organic food markets.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cleveland Public Library</span> Library system of Cleveland, Ohio (USA)

The Cleveland Public Library is a public library system in Cleveland, Ohio. Founded in 1869, it had a circulation of 3.5 million items in 2020. It operates the Main Library on Superior Avenue in downtown Cleveland, 27 branches throughout the city, a mobile library, a Public Administration Library in City Hall, and the Ohio Library for the Blind and Physically Disabled. The library replaced the State Library of Ohio as the location for the Ohio Center for the Book in 2003.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vancouver City Hall</span> City hall in Vancouver, British Columbia

Vancouver City Hall is home to Vancouver City Council in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Located at 453 West 12th Avenue, the building was ordered by the Vancouver Civic Building Committee, designed by architect Fred Townley and Matheson, and built by Carter, Halls, Aldinger and Company. The building has a 12-storey tower with a clock on the top.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cornelia Oberlander</span> Canadian landscape architect (1921–2021)

Cornelia Hahn Oberlander LL.D. was a German-born Canadian landscape architect. Her firm, Cornelia Hahn Oberlander Landscape Architects, was founded in 1953, when she moved to Vancouver.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Strathcona, Vancouver</span> Neighbourhood in Vancouver, Metro Vancouver

Strathcona is the oldest residential neighbourhood of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Officially a part of the East Side, it is bordered by Downtown Vancouver's Chinatown neighbourhood and the False Creek inlet to the west, Downtown Eastside to the north, Grandview-Woodland to the east, and Mount Pleasant to the south of Emily Carr University and the Canadian National Railway and Great Northern Railway classification yards.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Greater Victoria Public Library</span>

The Greater Victoria Public Library (GVPL) is a public library that serves Victoria, British Columbia and the surrounding area.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Huntington Beach Public Library</span> Library system in California, US

The Huntington Beach Public Library (HBPL) is a library system located in Huntington Beach, California. It offers online databases, print and electronic books and magazines, children's programs, computer lab, DVDs, CDs, and audiobooks for anyone with a Huntington Beach Library card. Library cards are free to California residents. Free wireless access is available at all locations without a card.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carnegie Community Centre</span> Public library in Vancouver, British Columbia

Carnegie Community Centre is located at 401 Main Street at the corner of Hastings Street, in the old Carnegie Public Library building in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, British Columbia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Georgia Street</span> Canadian urban road in Vancouver and Burnaby

Georgia Street is an east–west street in the cities of Vancouver and Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. Its section in Downtown Vancouver, designated West Georgia Street, serves as one of the primary streets for the financial and central business districts, and is the major transportation corridor connecting downtown Vancouver with the North Shore by way of the Lions Gate Bridge. The remainder of the street, known as East Georgia Street between Main Street and Boundary Road and simply Georgia Street within Burnaby, is more residential in character, and is discontinuous at several points.

The University of British Columbia Library is the library system of the University of British Columbia (UBC). The library is one of the 124 members of the Association of Research Libraries (ARL). In 2017, UBC Library ranked 29th among members of the ARL for the number of volumes in library, making it the third largest Canadian academic library after the University of Toronto and the University of Alberta. However, UBC Library ranked 23rd for the titles held and second in Canada, and had a materials expenditures of $13.8 million, placing it 44th.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Main Street (Vancouver)</span> Major road in Vancouver, British Columbia

Main Street is a major north–south thoroughfare bisecting Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It runs from Waterfront Road by Burrard Inlet in the north, to Kent Avenue alongside the north arm of the Fraser River in the south.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Broadway (Vancouver)</span> Thoroughfare in Vancouver, British Columbia

Broadway is a major east–west thoroughfare in the city of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. In Vancouver's numbered avenue grid system, it runs in place of a 9th Avenue, between 8th and 10th. The street has six lanes for most of its course. Portions of the street carry the British Columbia Highway 7 designation.

This is a timeline of the history of Vancouver.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Architecture of Vancouver</span>

The architecture of Vancouver and the Greater Vancouver area consists of a variety of modern architectural styles, such as the 20th-century Edwardian and the 21st-century modernist styles. Initially, the city architects embraced styles developed in Europe and the United States, with only limited local variation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kildonan, British Columbia</span> Unincorporated community in British Columbia, Canada

Kildonan is an unincorporated community in the Alberni Inlet-Barkley Sound region of the west coast of southern Vancouver Island, British Columbia. The former steamboat landing and ferry dock is on the east shore of Uchuchklesit Inlet, which branches northwest of the lower reaches of Alberni Inlet. Adjacent to Pacific Rim National Park Reserve, the locality is by road and ferry about 120 kilometres (75 mi) southwest of Port Alberni.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Punter, John (2003). "Downtown Vancouver, 1991–2000". The Vancouver Achievement: Urban Planning and Design. UBC Press. ISBN   978-0-7748-0972-6.
  2. "About Vancouver Public Library" . Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  3. 1 2 "Vancouver Public Library Annual Report 2023" (PDF). Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  4. "VPL Annual Statistics 2023 FINAL" (PDF). Retrieved 12 October 2024.
  5. "Carnegie Branch".
  6. Canada's Historic Places – Carnegie Centre, 401 Main Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6A, Canada
  7. The History of Carnegie Centre, UBC Community, Partners, and Alumni Publications
  8. Carnegie Community Centre History
  9. Nitschke banned from Canada library
  10. Suicide workshop survives cancellation
  11. Vancouver church hosts right-to-die doctor
  12. 1 2 "Vancouver Public Library History". Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 18 May 2011.
  13. 1 2 Pacific Northwest Libraries. Seattle, Washington: University of Washington Press. 1926. p. 38. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  14. "Goodman, a family history".
  15. Davis, Chuck, ed. (1976). The Vancouver Book. North Vancouver, British Columbia: J.J. Douglas. pp. 421–422. ISBN   0-88894-084-X.
  16. "Librarian Robinson Dies". The Province. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. 25 October 1957. p. 8. Retrieved 30 April 2020.
  17. "The Vancouver Sun 07 Nov 1957, page 28". The Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. 7 November 1957. p. 28. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  18. "New library director admits he's no expert". The Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. 12 July 1979. p. 8. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  19. "Paul Whitney – Keep Calm and Carry On or Freak Out and Throw Stuff; The Public Library Moving Forward | ikblc.ubc.ca". ikblc.ubc.ca. Retrieved 8 October 2020.
  20. "Library Management". Archived from the original on 26 May 2015. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  21. "Christina de Castell". Vancouver Public Library. Retrieved 8 October 2020.
  22. "Vancouver Public Library: About the Library". Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 18 May 2011.
  23. The nə́c̓aʔmat ct Strathcona Branch
  24. "New Strathcona library and social housing complex opens". 19 April 2017. Archived from the original on 17 January 2021.
  25. Kitsilano Branch
  26. Pound, Richard W. (2005). 'Fitzhenry and Whiteside Book of Canadian Facts and Dates'. Fitzhenry and Whiteside.
  27. "Vancouver Public Library unveils new community spaces and much anticipated rooftop garden". Vancouver Public Library. 29 September 2018. Retrieved 9 October 2018.

49°16′47″N123°06′56″W / 49.279719°N 123.115625°W / 49.279719; -123.115625 (Vancouver Public Library)