Ottawa Public Library

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Coordinates: 45°25′12″N 75°41′43″W / 45.42°N 75.69528°W / 45.42; -75.69528

The Ottawa Public Library (OPL) is the library system of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. The library was founded in 1906 with a donation from the Carnegie Foundation.

Contents

[edit] Origin of the OPL

The original library building in the 1900s.

Prior to the twentieth century, Ottawa had a few reading rooms in hotel lobbies, and also some small fee-based libraries for working men, but no truly free place for anyone to read. The city's active Local Council of Women took up the cause of a free library for all. They announced, just before the election of 1896, that the mansion of George Perley, a local lumber baron, was donated in his will as a home for the library. However, the city voted down the motion to build a library, as well as another motion to build a firehall; the city just didn't have any money to spare for "luxuries".

Only in 1901, when letters were mailed to Andrew Carnegie. Carnegie replied that he would offer $100,000 to the city to build the library if they provided a site and a pledge of $7,500 a year to maintain it. They eventually agreed in January 1903, and within a few years the library was built and open to the public.

[edit] Current day

Ottawa Public Library's Main Branch
The Rideau branch on Rideau Street.
The Sunnyside branch in Old Ottawa South.
The OPL bookmobile, when it was headquartered at the Sunnyside Branch. It is now headquartered at the newly opened Greenboro District Branch, which opened in 2006.

The main branch of the library is located in downtown Ottawa at the corner of Metcalfe and Laurier, at the same spot as the original Carnegie library, although nothing remains of the original building but some stained glass windows. Several of the Corinthian columns from the old Carnegie library survive in the Rockeries in Rockcliffe Park, a rock garden maintained by the National Capital Commission. The library now has thirty-three branches spread throughout Ottawa and the surrounding area.

Before the City of Ottawa's amalgamation in 2001, which result in the merging of eleven separate municipal library systems, the Ottawa Public Library itself only had a few libraries, including Sunnyside, Rideau, and Rosemount. Today, the library is divided into district branches such as Nepean Centrepoint, Cumberland and Greenboro, and community branches like Sunnyside, Ruth E. Dickinson and Carlingwood.

Patrons throughout the new city have greatly benefited from the 2001 merger, since they can now easily order almost any book from another branch, and return books to anywhere in the city. Ordering items via the library website for pickup at a local branch has been very popular with over 5 million visitors to the website in 2007. The new system is very centralized, however, which has meant a loss of decision-making power in many ways, including the choice of books for purchase and the old, local ways of running the smaller libraries. Patrons can however suggest items for the library to purchase.

The current head of OPL is Barbara Clubb, who was also president of the Canadian Library Association in 2005. The OPL is governed by a board of fourteen part-time members appointed by the City of Ottawa, six city councillors and eight members of the public. The Library is funded mainly by the city through local tax revenues. Some revenue also comes from the province, and traditional library sources of fees, fines, and fundraising.

The library system has 2.3 million items, 91.7% percent of which are books. The library also has a large audio-visual collection including DVDs, CDs, VHS tapes and downloadable audiobooks. There are also 359 public internet stations and 79 electronic databases. Since Ottawa has a significant francophone population, a large portion of the collection is in French, with some branches such as Vanier working almost exclusively in French. Smaller collections are also held in a wide array of other languages, notably Chinese, Hindi, and Arabic. According to the latest Ontario library statistics, only the Toronto Public Library has larger holdings. The library also hosts a full range of programming for both adults and children, with children's programming being extremely popular.

The Library has two bookmobiles, which operated out of the Sunnyside branch for almost 50 years, stop at regularly scheduled places throughout the city, in an effort to reach neighborhoods without library branches. Many of these neighborhoods are poorer, more remote, or for some reason slightly too far from a library branch. During a funding crisis in 2004, the older bookmobile was nearly decommissioned, but instead it was kept in service with a second, new bookmobile added in 2005. The Bookmobile headquarters was moved to the new Greenboro District Branch in June 2006.

This large new branch, the Greenboro Branch, has been built in the Greenboro area in the city's rapidly-growing South end, and opened on June 7, 2006, replacing the Blossom Park Branch in the Blossom Park neighbourhood of the former City of Gloucester.

[edit] New Central Library

In recent years, numerous cities such as Vancouver, Seattle and Salt Lake City, have had great success in constructing new central libraries as part of downtown revitilization efforts. These urban landmarks have created new civic spaces that both create community and are key component of an information socirety. Accordingly, there is pressure for Ottawa to follow this trend and replace its outdated central library. There was an offer which was eventually rejected by city council from a developer for a partnership to build in the still-mostly-empty Lebreton Flats. The Lebreton Flats has been rejected as a possible location as it is not considered part of the downtown core. Instead, a new building is to be built in the city block bordered by Albert, Lyon, Bay and Slater streets. This new building is estimated to cost 180 million dollars and the library board is currently attempting to raise the required funds. The board ideally hopes to have this new library built and opened to the public by 2014.

[edit] Branches

MAP
Alta Vista Beaverbrook Blackburn Hamlet
Bookmobile Carlingwood Carp
Centennial Constance Bay Cumberland
Elmvale Acres Emerald Plaza Fitzroy Harbour
Greely Greenboro District Hazledean
Main Manotick Metcalfe
Munster Nepean Centrepointe North Gloucester
North Gower Orleans Osgoode
Richmond Rideau Rockliffe Park
Rosemount Ruth E. Dickinson St-Laurent
Stittsville Sunnyside Vanier
Vernon

[edit] Trivia

  • The day after its official opening, in 1906, the original Carnegie library opened several hours later than expected, because the mass of people who had come to the opening day left the entire library in complete disarray, and had walked off with many items.
  • The Rideau Branch of the OPL is thought to have been the first bilingual public library branch in North America when it opened in 1934.
  • The books at the rural Fitzroy Harbour branch, the most Westerly branch of the OPL, were subjected to an entirely unfortunate skunk spraying in 1998.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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