Vancouver Island Regional Library

The Vancouver Island Regional Library(VIRL) is the fourth-largest library system in British Columbia. It serves more than 430,000 people on Vancouver Island, Haida Gwaii (formerly Queen Charlotte Islands) and the Central Coast (Bella Coola) through 39 branch libraries and a books-by-mail service. Administrative offices are located in Nanaimo. Vancouver Island Regional Library opened its doors in 1936 as the Vancouver Island Union Library; it was the second regional library in North America.

Vancouver Island Regional Library
CountryCanada
TypeRegional Public library
Established1936
Coordinates49°9′57″N 123°56′11″W
Branches39
Collection
Items collectedbooks, e-books, music, CDs, periodicals, maps, genealogical archives, business directories, local history
Size1.1M (2011)
Access and use
Circulation4,997,285 (2018)
Population served427,236 (2018)
Other information
Budget$23,967,910 (2018)
DirectorRosemary Bonanno
WebsiteVancouver Island Regional Library
Map
References: https://virl.bc.ca/about/reports-and-plans/2018-annual-report/

Services

Vancouver Island Regional Library offers a books-by-mail service.[1] VIRL has a searchable online catalogue.[2]

  • Information and reference services
  • Access to full text databases
  • Community information
  • Internet access
  • Reader's advisory services
  • Programs for children, youth and adults
  • Delivery to homebound individuals
  • Interlibrary loan
  • Free downloadable audiobooks

Branches

With Central Services on Hammond Bay Road in north Nanaimo, VIRL has branches in Bella Coola, Bowser, Campbell River, Chemainus, Comox, Cortes Island, Courtenay, Cowichan, Cowichan Lake, Cumberland, Gabriola Island, Gold River, Hornby Island, Ladysmith, Masset, Nanaimo Harbourfront, Nanaimo North, Nanaimo Wellington, Parksville, Port Alberni, Port Alice, Port Clements, Port Hardy, Port McNeill, Port Renfrew, Quadra Island, Qualicum Beach, Queen Charlotte City, Sandspit, Sayward, Sidney/North Saanich, Sointula, Sooke, South Cowichan, Tahsis, Tofino, Ucluelet, Union Bay and Woss.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.