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Click on images at left for larger color
views. [Google Earth link]
Winnipeg's Centennial
Library was built in the 1970s, carrying many of that
era's worst traits in its design, particularly an introverted
monumentality that fails to effectively connect to the park
space its 45-degree diagonal plan allows. For a major renovation
and expansion of the library, Patkau
Architects proposed a four-story glass-walled atrium space
overlooking the park, a feature that improves on this external
connection, while also improving on the internal workings
of the library.
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Working in a joint venture with
LM
Architectural Group, the architects contend that the "existing
library consists largely of independent floor plates isolated
from one another." Their solution places reading rooms
next to the exterior wall
in the large four-story space,
with a straight-run stair between those rooms and the existing.
The latter's exterior walls were opened for additional openness
and a visual connection to the park and its sunlight. |
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In addition to this unifying
space, a fourth floor was added above the existing library,
as illustrated in this model
and this section. Looking
at the plans, this top floor
creates much-needed space for the stacks. This decision must
have been driven by general concerns of a library's place
in contemporary society rather than more functional concerns
like structure, which might have dictated that the stacks
be located on a lower floor. |
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With the rise of the internet
and the retrieval of information via digital means -- as well
as the affordability of a certain online merchant -- libraries
have had to modify their physical embodiments as well as their
role in society. Visitors to libraries are often confronted
with video rentals, cafes, gift shops, and computer stations
upon entering, perhaps never seeing a book before leaving.
The prolonged existence of libraries is due to their public
nature, as much as librarians tout their skills as one antidote
among many to the "death
of the library." With so much privatization days,
it's refreshing to not only have places that are truly public
but to actually experience them, in whatever way that may
be.
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Winnipeg Centennial Library in Winnipeg, Canada
by Patkau Architects & LM Architectural Group |
2007.03.05 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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