North Portland Library

The North Portland Library is a branch of the Multnomah County Library, in Portland, Oregon.[1] The branch offers the Multnomah County Library catalog of two million books, periodicals and other materials.[1]

North Portland Library
The front exterior in 2012
General information
Architectural styleJacobean
Address512 N. Killingsworth Street
Town or cityPortland, Oregon
CountryUnited States
Coordinates45.562454°N 122.671507°W / 45.562454; -122.671507
OpenedFebruary 20, 1913
RenovatedMarch 21, 2000
OwnerMultnomah County Library
Technical details
Floor area9,500 square feet (880 m2)
Design and construction
Architecture firmJacobberger & Smith
Renovating team
Renovating firmThomas Hacker and Associates
Structural engineerDegenkolb Engineers
Awards and prizesGrand Award (Consulting Engineers Council of Oregon)
Website

History

Public library service in the neighborhoods of North Portland began with the opening of a reading room on North Albina Street in 1909. Starting with a collection of about 500 books, it became a sub-branch of the Portland library system in 1911 but without all of the services offered by the Central Library in downtown Portland. Later in 1911, the collection was moved to another building and merged with books from another reading room to create the North Albina Library, a branch of the Central Library.[2]

After the Carnegie Corporation of New York donated funds for four new branch libraries in Portland in 1912, the community undertook construction of the North Portland Library to replace the North Albina Library. Built on land donated by neighborhood residents, the Jacobean-style library opened on February 20, 1913, on the corner of North Killingworth Street and North Commercial Avenue.[2] Interior architectural details include an open-beam ceiling and bas-reliefs.[3] Patrons have included students from Jefferson High School, built next door to the library.[2]

In 1955, North Portland Library was among six branches chosen for expanded collections, longer hours, more services, and daily deliveries from the Central Library. In 1987, a wing of the library was devoted to works about African-Americans. In 1996, Multnomah County voters passed a bond measure to renovate and modernize branch libraries in the system. North Portland Library got seismic retrofitting, a new roof, an elevator, new lighting and furniture and telecommunications equipment, more restrooms, and improvements to plumbing and other infrastructure.[2]

The seismic retrofit resulted from changes to Portland's building codes aimed at making structures less likely to collapse during an earthquake. The changes apply to older buildings when they are being altered in other ways such as changing occupancy, building an addition, or repairing the roof. The North Portland Library was particularly vulnerable to strong ground movements because of its unreinforced masonry. Degenkolb Engineers undertook the retrofit. It was the first of its kind in Portland, according to a Degenkolb representative quoted in a news article in the Daily Journal of Commerce.[4] In 2011, Degenkolb won a Grand Award from the Consulting Engineers Council of Oregon for its structural engineering work on the library.[5]

After being closed for about a year for the renovation work, the building reopened on March 21, 2000.[2] Self-checkout stations and security gates were installed in 2011.[6]

gollark: Intel have GPUs too now! Discrete ones!
gollark: Yes you can. We CLEARLY are.
gollark: Additionally, they sell Ryzen Embedded and such.
gollark: Given the A300 "chipset", all Ryzens can operate as basically-SoCs.
gollark: Also Atom.

See also

References

  1. "North Portland Library". Multnomah County Library. Retrieved August 22, 2012.
  2. "North Portland Library History". Multnomah County Library. June 3, 2011. Retrieved November 8, 2012.
  3. King, Bart (2007). An Architectural Guidebook to Portland (2nd ed.). Corvallis: Oregon State University Press. p. 274. ISBN 978-0-87071-191-6.
  4. "Portland Building Owners Literally Brace for the Worst". Daily Journal of Commerce. November 23, 1999. Retrieved November 8, 2012.
  5. Basalyga, Stephanie (January 12, 2011). "KPFF, Degenkolb Capture Top Honor at CECO Awards". Daily Journal of Commerce. Retrieved November 8, 2012.
  6. "Belmont, North Portland and St. Johns Libraries to Close for Equipment Installation". Multnomah County Library. February 23, 2011. Retrieved November 1, 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.