The ArchitectLibrarian Team: Ensuring excellence in library design - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 59
About This Presentation
Title:

The ArchitectLibrarian Team: Ensuring excellence in library design

Description:

The ArchitectLibrarian Team: Ensuring excellence in library design – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:43
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 60
Provided by: jsc61
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The ArchitectLibrarian Team: Ensuring excellence in library design


1
The Architect/Librarian TeamEnsuring excellence
in library design
  • Janine Schmidt, University Librarian, University
    of Queensland
  • Hamilton Wilson, Wilson Architects, Brisbane

2
Overview
  • The Architect
  • The Librarian
  • The Beginning of the Relationship
  • Getting the model right
  • What is excellence?
  • The results
  • Responsiveness to changing needs
  • Continuous tuning and a maturing relationship

3
(No Transcript)
4
The Architect and the Librarian
5
The Architect
  • Nice guy
  • Queensland born, bred and educated
  • Fourth generation architect from firm 120 years
    old, oldest continuous firm in the WHOLE WIDE
    WORLD
  • Driving force workplaces are for people, not
    objects
  • Listen to the client

6
The Librarian
  • Nice gal
  • Queensland born, bred and educated
  • Worked in Victoria, New South Wales and
    Queensland in special and university libraries
    taught in library school
  • Tired of working in tired buildings - it has to
    be better than this!
  • Client-focused, market-oriented

7
The Beginning of the Relationship the
librarians perspective
  • Looking for a new way of doing things
  • Project at UQ requiring work expressions of
    interest sought
  • New ideas video stores, bookshops, link
    building
  • Looking for architect who understood problem and
    shared desire to find a new, client-focused
    solution
  • Previous building experiences at UNSW and SLNSW
  • Concept brief prepared

8
The Beginning of the Relationship the
architects perspective
  • Familiar with working with the University of
    Queensland
  • No previous experience in libraries
  • Comfortable with new Director of Property and
    Facilities at UQ knew nothing about the
    University Librarian
  • Project looked interesting (most are) it was
    extremely challenging to work with significant
    (heritage) buildings of renowned architects

9
What we began with
10
Libraries have a long proud history
  • Iconic knowledge keepers and protectors
  • Stores of knowledge in all its formats
  • Organisers of knowledge
  • Acculturation of scholars
  • Beautiful value-laden buildings
  • Libraries as collections and places for learning

11
Getting the model right- the librarians
perspective
  • Provide cost effective services
  • Amalgamate collections (undergraduate)
  • Develop an electronic library
  • Provide exhibition space
  • Provide for 200 computer workstations
  • Ensure appropriate flow of people and linking of
    services
  • Improve segregated seating

12
Getting the model right- the librarians
perspective
  • Ensure flexibility, upgrade security, provide for
    disabled access
  • Present as an attractive place to study and
    provide social meeting area/coffee
  • Provide facilities for postgraduate study
  • Accommodate library staff together, with their
    own desks
  • Include an electronic kiosk service and
    assignment preparation area

13
Getting the model right- the architects
perspective
  • Do not let the existing building control the
    agenda

14
Fisher Library - University of Sydney
Map out the existing model and then define new
abstract model. More service points does not
necessarily mean ease of use for the clients
15
Fisher Library - University of Sydney
16
Fisher Library - University of Sydney
17
Talking and thinking right- together
  • Walk around with eyes open
  • How other people do their business retail
    stores, video shops, hi-fi stores,
    telecommunications/phone outlets, banks, hotels,
    internet cafes, bookshops
  • Watched what people did and how they interacted
    with buildings and engaged
  • Flowcharted what people (clients and staff) did
  • Considered technology as an enabler, not a driver
  • Mapped out the people types

18
Other similar services video stores?
Bookshops?
19
Retail stores?
20
Getting the model right - together
  • Flowchart/map what the users do e.g. search
    catalogue, go to shelves, retrieve, borrow/copy
  • Identify the most heavily used resources/services
    e.g. catalogue, loans desk
  • Identify relationships of resources/services e.g.
    copiers near collections
  • Identify levels and type of help/assistance
    required by clients in use e.g. technical, fines,
    training

21
(No Transcript)
22
The Results
23
(No Transcript)
24
The partnered projects
  • Duhig Library
  • Social Sciences and Humanities Library
  • Fryer Library
  • E-zones
  • Dorothy Hill Physical Sciences and Engineering
    Library
  • Architecture/Music Library
  • Law Library
  • Herston Medical Library
  • Economics and Business Library
  • Ipswich Campus Library
  • Biological Sciences Library

25
Some lessons learned
  • Badge and brand all branch libraries in a similar
    way, using colour, layout and signage
    MacDonald's, BP and Coles cant all be wrong
  • All services and language are the same
  • Match physical facilities with website and
    publications
  • Entry areas treated as prime real estate

26
(No Transcript)
27
(No Transcript)
28
Change continues.
  • New pedagogies e-learning, flexible delivery
  • Internet
  • Student expectations and behaviour always in a
    hurry, operating under time pressures
  • Paying customers
  • Growing international and postgraduate numbers
  • Self-service and self-sufficiency
  • The café culture

29
Developing the model further
  • Who are the clients, what are their needs and how
    do they behave?
  • What are the services to be provided now and in
    the foreseeable future?
  • Where? Use from home or office? Where is the
    real and virtual library today?
  • Collection centric? Size of collection?

30
How do clients use the services?
  • Take away
  • Look up, locate, borrow/photocopy/print, return
  • Eat in
  • Study
  • Individually, Group, Browse, In-depth
  • Seek personalized help
  • Use computers
  • E-mail, search catalogue/database network,
    Cybrary website, University website, reading
    lists, CAL programs, Internet, Applications,
    Prepare presentations
  • Print/photocopy
  • Order in, from afar
  • Any time, any space, any pace

31
Developing the model further
  • What technology is to be housed?
  • What are the staff activities ?
  • Entry for materials and for people?
  • What security is to be provided for materials
    and people?
  • What kind of seating?
  • Numbers/standards?
  • How does one make it future-proof?

32
The service client-based model
  • Library without walls?
  • Improved service delivery
  • Easier access to information
  • Cheaper to operate
  • Accommodate variety of user behaviour
  • Driven by client needs, not technology,
    collection or existing buildings
  • Combination of various drivers

33
Cafes and culture
34
Express terminals
35
Self-service
36
Seating
37
(No Transcript)
38
Change continues
  • Ever more e..
  • E-learning becomes m-learning?
  • Googleisation
  • Increasing self-service but I dont care how much
    you know until I know how much you care
  • Student fees increasing
  • Marketing of experiences not products
  • Time pressures increasing the haven of home
  • Home delivery

39
What do the statistics tell us about changed use
? (2003)
  • Take away/eat in (30 of website use from library
    branches)
  • 3,000,000 people used study areas and computers
    in e-zones
  • 1.6 million items borrowed
  • 44,000 attended information skills classes (0ver
    31,000 thus far 2004)
  • Order in (30 of website use from UQ, 40
    external)
  • Dial-up from offices/laboratories within
    university/homes/workplaces throughout world
  • Check website, catalogue, service availability,
    holdings, use e-journals, e-books, ask questions,
    databases
  • Over 30 million pages of website used by more
    than 500,000 computers throughout world

40
Ever more e
41
M-learning
42
New dimension of self-service
43
Library as Experience
44
Library as experience
  • Listening
  • Looking, reading
  • Communicating e-mail, chat
  • Feeling
  • Gaining inspiration and ideas
  • Receiving training
  • Sense of community being with others
  • Social activity

45
Approaches to library design
  • Collection-centric
  • Client-focused
  • Experience-centred

46
The Experience
  • Choice of learning/study experiences. How do you
    feel?
  • Focus is on interaction - with information -
    printed, digital, multimedia andother people
  • Variety of emotive spaces.
  • Dark
  • Light
  • Buzzy
  • Quiet
  • Dreamy
  • Cosy
  • Big
  • Warm
  • Intimate

47
Understanding behaviour the introvert, voyeur,
exhibitionist
48
And enhancing the experience
Writing on walls
Making the library Memorable
Easy to navigate
Collaborative opportunity Place for heads down
hard work Place
for informal learning
Reading in garden, by stream with fish
Talking in booths
49
Seating
50
Seating
51
Dynamic experiences feed off each other
Presentation
Booths
Breakout
Group study
52
Wayfinding
How easy is it to find the information you are
looking for?
53
Wayfinding
54
Lighting your way
55
Colour and life
56
Computer rooms, information commons, e-zones,
collaborative learning centres
57
(No Transcript)
58
The Ongoing Partnership Librarian and Architect
  • Choose each other carefully get a good
    pre-nuptial contract
  • Listen to and understand each other
  • Learn from each project and what is going on
    elsewhere Biological Sciences Library
  • Avoid ad hoc decisions plan and model
  • Keep on developing the model evolution not
    revolution

59
Thanks for listening
Questions?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com