Posted Jul 17, 2024, 11:53 AM
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Join Date: Mar 2006
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North Branch Library
An article in the C-H today reveals plans to reconstruct the Gottingen St North Branch library at a current estimated pricetag of $33 million. Considering that the palatial designer library on SGR cost just over $50 million not all that many years ago this seems like quite the project. Oddly enough the library management does not seem to know what they will be building as there is no design as yet. That can only mean $33 mil will not be enough money.
Some snips from the C-H:
Quote:
For 58 years, the library on Gottingen Street has done a lot of heavy lifting in its north-end Halifax neighbourhood but it hasn’t been updated.
Until now.
After several years waiting its turn for capital funding from HRM, the request for interested designers and builders to begin $33-million worth (budgeted over four years) of renovations at the Halifax North Memorial Public Library is active.
This is the first phase of a massive construction project expected to finish in 2028 with a completely redesigned space “to address building condition issues, introduce the highest levels of accessibility and sustainability features, and reimagine the space.”
Brenda, who lives in the neighbourhood and stops in at the library every couple of weeks, said it’s a really important resource for the community.
“The staff is great, the facility is not so great,” said Brenda, who didn't want her last name published. “They need more space so I hope that’s what they’re getting.
“It’s the only place around here for people, bathrooms, just a cool place to be and just somewhere they can hang out.”
Beula Irubayaraj takes her two-year-old son here all the time to play and for the programming.
“It’s quite useful for us,” she said in an interview in front of the library Tuesday.
As for the renos, she said she hopes there will be more space in the children’s area.
Idea is unformed
Beyond the principle of accessibility and sustainability, the specifics will be up to the community and the designers, said Megan Gainer, director of facilities with Halifax Public Libraries.
“The community is really going to tell us what they want and then we’ll make sure that those wants are reflected in the final project,” she said.
Brenda, who lives in the neighbourhood and stops in at the library every couple of weeks, said it’s a really important resource for the community.
“The staff is great, the facility is not so great,” said Brenda, who didn't want her last name published. “They need more space so I hope that’s what they’re getting.
“It’s the only place around here for people, bathrooms, just a cool place to be and just somewhere they can hang out.”
Beula Irubayaraj takes her two-year-old son here all the time to play and for the programming.
“It’s quite useful for us,” she said in an interview in front of the library Tuesday.
As for the renos, she said she hopes there will be more space in the children’s area.
Idea is unformed
Beyond the principle of accessibility and sustainability, the specifics will be up to the community and the designers, said Megan Gainer, director of facilities with Halifax Public Libraries.
“The community is really going to tell us what they want and then we’ll make sure that those wants are reflected in the final project,” she said.
They can’t add much to the footprint of the building but they can do more with the three-story structure than what’s available now, Gainer said.
“That’s all to be determined in the design phase,” she said. “Currently the public part of the branch is about 12,000 square feet and we do have a basement level that’s used for other services and we would look to turn that space into public (space).”
That move alone would double the space (the upper level is a small office space).
“We may or may not need an addition on top of all of that.”
They don’t want to change the exterior too much because it’s a “familiar face in the neighbourhood,” she said, and one of the constants in an area that has seen a lot of change lately.
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Hold on to your wallets.
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