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  #61  
Old Posted Jan 24, 2020, 8:00 PM
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Library of Parliament gives me wood...
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  #62  
Old Posted Jan 24, 2020, 8:08 PM
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Originally Posted by MonkeyRonin View Post
I know it's been mentioned already, but the interior of the Toronto Reference Library is stunning as well:


Toronto Reference Library
by Matt Wiebe, on Flickr


_1079984
by Paul, on Flickr
Reminds me of the interior of the Renaissance Center in Detroit.
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  #63  
Old Posted Jan 24, 2020, 8:16 PM
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A change in the carpet would breathe a lot of new life into that space!
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  #64  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2020, 5:00 AM
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While Edmonton's new central branch is turning out to be an ugly beast, the Edmonton Public Library's done a really great job modernizing the suburban branches in recent years.
The Jasper Place Branch opened in 2013 and was designed by Dub Architects and HCMA Architecture:

https://hcma.ca/project/jasper-place-public-library/

https://www.archdaily.com/398988/jas...dub-architects

The Capilano Branch opened in 2018 and was designed by Patkau Architects:






And the city's oldest, and original, library building is still in use: the 1912 Strathcona Public Library building. It was originally intended to be a Carnegie branch, but the SPL's request of $25,000 was turned down. Offered only $15,000, they decided to forgo the grant and all of Carnegie's staunch requirements to build this building instead.


The only kind of old-school reading room we have left is the University of Alberta's 1951 Rutherford Reading Room, which is pretty spectacular:
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  #65  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2020, 5:29 AM
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Originally Posted by Calgarian View Post
A change in the carpet would breathe a lot of new life into that space!
I disagree. I think the carpet is one of the defining features of the space. It reminds me of Stanley Kubrick and I love it!
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  #66  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2020, 5:33 AM
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Those other Edmonton libraries look great! How did they botch the central one so badly while promoting such awesome design in the burbs? Was it a different city council?
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  #67  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2020, 6:16 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by _Citizen_Dane_ View Post
While Edmonton's new central branch is turning out to be an ugly beast, the Edmonton Public Library's done a really great job modernizing the suburban branches in recent years.
The Jasper Place Branch opened in 2013 and was designed by Dub Architects and HCMA Architecture:

https://hcma.ca/project/jasper-place-public-library/

https://www.archdaily.com/398988/jas...dub-architects
That's nice enough to be a central library even though it would be on the small side.
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  #68  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2020, 6:18 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by O-tacular View Post
It reminds me of Stanley Kubrick and I love it!
Also this
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  #69  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2020, 6:43 AM
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Wired magazine's 10 most beautiful libraries list has a Canadian entry:

1) Dokk1 Library, Aarhus, Denmark (Schmidt Hammer Lassen)
2) Lawrence (Kansas) Public Library, (by Gould Evans)
3) Yangzhou Zhongshuge, Zhen Yuan, China (by X+Living)
4) Beyazit Library, Istanbul (by Tabanlioglu Architects)
5) Vennesla Library, Norway (by Helen & Hard Architects)
6) Bodø Library, Norway (by DRDH)
7) Chicago Public Library, (by SOM)
8) Birmingham Library, (by Mecanoo)
9) Halifax Library, by Schmidt Hammer Lassen
10) Conarte Library, Monterrey Mexico (by Anagrama)

https://www.wired.com/2016/09/settle...braries-earth/

The BBC also features one (unnumbered viewer chosen list)

El Escorial Library in Madrid
Vancouver Public Library
Bodleian Library in Oxford
Trinity College Library in Dublin
Boston Public Library
The Main Reading Room, Library of Congress in Washington, DC
Ruins of the Library of Celsus in ancient city of Ephesus
John Rylands Library in Manchester
Sainte-Geneviève Library in Paris
Picton Reading Room, Liverpool Central Library

http://www.bbc.com/culture/story/201...iful-libraries
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  #70  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2020, 7:31 AM
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The Grande Bibliothèque in Montreal was designed by Patkau Architects and completed in 2005. I've always found it a little unimpressive from the outside but it's a lovely building inside with an interesting variety of spaces. It combines Montreal's central public library with Quebec's national library and it's always very busy thanks to a great location on top of the city's busiest metro station.




https://patkau.ca/projects/gbq/

Montreal has historically had a very underdeveloped network of branch libraries but things are starting to improve. The Marc Favreau library that opened in Rosemont in 2013 is nice. It was designed by Dan Hanganu.




http://www.hanganu.com/index.php/fr/...quemarcfavreau

The Bibliothèque du Boisé in Ville Saint-Laurent also opened in 2013, designed by a consortium of three Quebec architecture firms.




https://www.archdaily.com/574698/the...du-boise-lemay

The Mordecai Richler library is in Mile End (near where he grew up) and is housed in a former Anglican church. It's small and a bit cramped but the vaulted ceiling is nice and so is the stained glass.


http://ville.montreal.qc.ca/culture/...public-library

Among Montreal's historic libraries is the Saint-Sulpice library, which built in 1912 and was where part of the Quebec national library's collection was housed before the Grande Bibliothèque was built. It is currently empty with plans to convert it into a library for teens, but unfortunately those plans keep being delayed.



http://saintsulpice.banq.qc.ca

Montreal's former central library was built in 1917 and served the city until the Grande Bibliothèque was built. It's a nice building but not particularly big and it never played a very central or unifying role in the city, maybe because its location feels just a little bit out of the way (even if it isn't really). It is now home to the municipal arts and heritage councils.




http://archivesdemontreal.com/2017/0...e-de-montreal/
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  #71  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2020, 7:43 AM
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This is an upcoming expansion of the Maisonneuve library in the Hochelaga-Maisonneuve neighbourhood of Montreal. There was some local opposition to the design by Patkau Architects – one of the people opposed to it was quoted as saying the library should be expanded underground so as not to damage the integrity of the original beaux-arts architecture. I can only imagine that someone who thinks an underground library is a good idea is someone who never spends any time in libraries. Luckily the city is moving ahead with the project regardless.


https://www.ledevoir.com/politique/m...ue-maisonneuve

Here's the existing building. The expansion would impose a couple of glass boxes on either side.


http://ville.montreal.qc.ca/culture/...public-library
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  #72  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2020, 2:30 PM
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  #73  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2020, 9:01 PM
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Cobourg Library



This little courtyard usually has chess boards and stuff now, looks deserted here
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  #74  
Old Posted Jan 26, 2020, 4:30 PM
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Those local branch libraries in Edmonton are amazing.

I'm a big fan of the expansion plans for the Maisonneuve Library. Too often people call for a replica of the original, but the contrast between the heavy stone and modern glass is very nice.

That 70s church conversion is also very well done.
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  #75  
Old Posted Jan 26, 2020, 9:53 PM
Hali87 Hali87 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kilgore Trout View Post
The Grande Bibliothèque in Montreal was designed by Patkau Architects and completed in 2005. I've always found it a little unimpressive from the outside but it's a lovely building inside with an interesting variety of spaces. It combines Montreal's central public library with Quebec's national library and it's always very busy thanks to a great location on top of the city's busiest metro station.

Is this Berri-UQAM? I've definitely been through/around that building a bunch of times.
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  #76  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2020, 1:15 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hali87 View Post
Is this Berri-UQAM? I've definitely been through/around that building a bunch of times.
Yes.
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  #77  
Old Posted Feb 12, 2020, 10:45 AM
Hali87 Hali87 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Calgarian View Post
What's the view like from the room in the big cantilevered part in Halifax?
A couple photos I took last week:


Untitled by Hali87, on Flickr


Untitled by Hali87, on Flickr
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  #78  
Old Posted Feb 12, 2020, 4:53 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse View Post
Wired magazine's 10 most beautiful libraries list has a Canadian entry:

1) Dokk1 Library, Aarhus, Denmark (Schmidt Hammer Lassen)
2) Lawrence (Kansas) Public Library, (by Gould Evans)
3) Yangzhou Zhongshuge, Zhen Yuan, China (by X+Living)
4) Beyazit Library, Istanbul (by Tabanlioglu Architects)
5) Vennesla Library, Norway (by Helen & Hard Architects)
6) Bodø Library, Norway (by DRDH)
7) Chicago Public Library, (by SOM)
8) Birmingham Library, (by Mecanoo)
9) Halifax Library, by Schmidt Hammer Lassen
10) Conarte Library, Monterrey Mexico (by Anagrama)

https://www.wired.com/2016/09/settle...braries-earth/

The BBC also features one (unnumbered viewer chosen list)

El Escorial Library in Madrid
Vancouver Public Library
Bodleian Library in Oxford
Trinity College Library in Dublin
Boston Public Library
The Main Reading Room, Library of Congress in Washington, DC
Ruins of the Library of Celsus in ancient city of Ephesus
John Rylands Library in Manchester
Sainte-Geneviève Library in Paris
Picton Reading Room, Liverpool Central Library

http://www.bbc.com/culture/story/201...iful-libraries
Oh that makes sense, both lists are from 4/5 years ago. Though the BBC list seems to only be about ancient or suuuper grand libraries. Not that I'm not a big fan of the Vancouver Library, but I'm unclear on why it would be on that list...
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  #79  
Old Posted Feb 12, 2020, 9:56 PM
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London's old central library is a beautiful building in a beautiful location. Today? It's in a mall.

That sounds very boring but in hind sight it was a great idea. The city desperately needed a larger main library but this was in the 90s when Eaton's closed. It left the largest downtown mall with gobs of empty space and a major commercial development that was going to turn into an empty shell and a blight on the urban landscape. This offered the ability to make sure that huge mall didn't collapse and gave Londoners a new much larger library in a very central location with underground parking and with 2 blocks of every downtown bus. Being on the main drag, Dundas Street, which was in collapse in the 90s, it also helped turn around the street and with it's new flex-street design, the main drag is quickly returning to it's former glory.

This precipitated other corporate and especially educational players to open downtown campuses like Fanshawe and, to a lesser extent, Western. It turned the tide for the mall which although not a thriving one, certainly a viable one so much so that the developer actually put more money into renovating the mall a couple years ago.

Thankfully the old building still remains and is fully occuppied so no heritage buildings were destroyed so it worked out to be a win-win. The movement of the library to the old Eaton's Centre was a first in Canada to try to salvage those huge gaping holes that had begun to develop across mid-size city Canada and has been followed by many cities in the country since.
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  #80  
Old Posted Feb 15, 2020, 3:18 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ssiguy View Post
London's old central library is a beautiful building in a beautiful location. Today? It's in a mall.

That sounds very boring but in hind sight it was a great idea. The city desperately needed a larger main library but this was in the 90s when Eaton's closed. It left the largest downtown mall with gobs of empty space and a major commercial development that was going to turn into an empty shell and a blight on the urban landscape. This offered the ability to make sure that huge mall didn't collapse and gave Londoners a new much larger library in a very central location with underground parking and with 2 blocks of every downtown bus. Being on the main drag, Dundas Street, which was in collapse in the 90s, it also helped turn around the street and with it's new flex-street design, the main drag is quickly returning to it's former glory.

This precipitated other corporate and especially educational players to open downtown campuses like Fanshawe and, to a lesser extent, Western. It turned the tide for the mall which although not a thriving one, certainly a viable one so much so that the developer actually put more money into renovating the mall a couple years ago.

Thankfully the old building still remains and is fully occuppied so no heritage buildings were destroyed so it worked out to be a win-win. The movement of the library to the old Eaton's Centre was a first in Canada to try to salvage those huge gaping holes that had begun to develop across mid-size city Canada and has been followed by many cities in the country since.
Not an architectural masterpiece, but a practical solution. It seems to have been well done.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Public_Library
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