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Neighbors speak out against SW library design

By: Michael Neibauer
Examiner Staff Writer
September 3, 2009

An artist’s rendering shows what the planned Washington Highlands Neighborhood Library may look like. (Courtesy image)

Leaders of a far Southwest D.C. community have asked a city planning board to reject a proposed branch library design they say is bizarre and utterly out of touch with their neighborhood.

The D.C. Public Library requires two zoning exemptions from the Board of Zoning Adjustments to build the new Washington Highlands Neighborhood Library at 115 Atlantic St. SW, a block off South Capitol Street. The BZA hearing Tuesday provided a handful of neighborhood leaders the chance to deride the library's ultramodern look -- a design from renowned British architect David Adjaye.

"It's not designed for us, and it's not designed for the culture of the neighborhood," Theresa Jones, a Washington Highlands advisory neighborhood commissioner, told The Examiner on Wednesday. "I want a library like I want oxygen, but I don't want that."

The branch is one of a dozen ongoing library projects costing $100 million-plus -- Georgetown, Shaw and Anacostia among them. Groundbreaking for the new Tenley-Friendship Library is scheduled for Sept. 23, library officials say. The new Parklands-Turner Community Library in Southeast is expected to open Oct. 5.

Washington Highlands is a tight-knit community of red brick, single-family detached homes, said Jones, who testified before the BZA with several other area commissioners. The library design features a large, completely transparent main structure made of glass attached to three pitched-roof pavilions, each a different color, built on angled columns.

The original Washington Highlands branch, built in 1959, was a modernist, progressive structure for the time, Adjaye told The Examiner. The new building, he said, was inspired by the scale of the neighborhood and will be a "beacon."

"Modernity need not be a frightening thing," said Adjaye, who was paid $1.3 million for his work.

Chief Librarian Ginnie Cooper said the design mirrors the Washington Highlands "that is coming" with new development on South Capitol.

"We are right in that area of change," she said.

Community leaders complain -- though the library system vehemently disagrees -- that the design was forced down their throats as they were left out of the planning process. The BZA will take the matter up again in October.

The library system is slated to open 11 branches in the next two years despite recent budget cuts that might affect staffing and operating hours. The goal, Cooper said, is to "make sure libraries are open as many hours as possible."

"We're opening new libraries in the midst of budget cuts," said Robin Diener, executive director of the D.C. Library Renaissance Project. "They're guaranteeing we're not going to be able to staff them."

mneibauer@washingtonexaminer.com



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Truelive

Sep 3, 2009

Let get past the design of a bulding thats will sometime in the future be replaced anyway. Lets concerate on how this facility will and the enity that occupy it be AONE. Ask yourself whether it will provide vital resources for the children, adults, seniors, businesses, colleges and ect. Let not fight, lets compomise and make sure that it serves the purpose intended.

 

Canjac Canjar

Sep 3, 2009

I do suppose that there are architechts in DC. Why hire a Brit to do what can be done here - and probably a more palpable design, too.....

 

Sick of Conformity in DC

Sep 4, 2009

How dare DC build anything creative, aggressively modern, and which doesn't look expectable?

And how dare DC focus on something exciting for the kids, instead of what a "handful of neighborhood leaders" are complaining about?

These "neighborhood leaders" are pathetic. Google some ANC action down there, and you'll spit out your coffee within a few minutes from reading their antics.

Build this library. It's for the kids, it's a challenging design, build it.

 

gell

Sep 4, 2009

$1.3 million to come up with a design for a library. Good to see our tax dollars being used so wisely by our incredibly talented leaders. What a joke--- are there ANY politicians with common sense?

 

ddd

Sep 4, 2009

ddd

 

Chris O.

Sep 4, 2009

For a complete timeline of the design process, visit >>
http://www.districtdynamos.org/washington_highlands/timeline

 

Chris O.

Sep 4, 2009

Here is a report, with videos, about the last community design meeting on June 30th >>
http://www.districtdynamos.org/washington_highlands/meetings/dcpl_6_30_09

 

Chris O.

Sep 4, 2009

Here's some reasons as to why Ward Eight residents have expressed they want to discuss a serious renovation and retrofit of the current library building, instead of tearing it down and rebuilding it for more than 10 million dollars >>
http://www.districtdynamos.org/washington_highlands/why_renovate

 

Ward 8 Deserves the Best

Sep 5, 2009

Here's a discussion that debunks Chris O's advocacy of rehabbing a shabby and confining 1959 library. Why does he believe other neighborhoods in DC deserve new gutsy modern libraries, but Ward 8 should get crumbs? Time to drop the "church basement" mentality for Ward 8. Their kids and families deserve this literally world-class new library design. Yes it's gutsy, it's out there, but Ward 8 deserves art, not crumbs:

http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/citydesk/2009/09/03/neighborhood-watch-ward-8-and-the-washington-highlands-library/#comments

 

jaymancapcity@yahoo.com

Sep 5, 2009

Here's a link to the full set of design images. This thing is gutsy and gorgeous:

http://www.dclibrary.org/dcpl/lib/dcpl/pdf/juneslideshow_2009.pdf

 

Check out other comments...

Sep 8, 2009

There's a whole slew on comments about the library design at DCist...

http://dcist.com/2009/09/washington_highlands_branch_library.php

 


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