Boston’s Roslindale Branch Library Transforms for the Digital Age
Leers Weinzapfel Associates has completely renovated the Boston Public Library’s Roslindale Branch Library for 21st century use while respecting and restoring its signature design elements. One of the Boston Public Library’s busiest locations, the 14,885 square-foot library’s historical blue color theme appears on its bright new entry, integrated into a series of multi-colored terra-cotta baguettes representing the diversity of the neighborhood and also serving as a metaphor for books on shelves. Slightly elevated from the adjacent street level and sheltered with landscape, an intimate reading garden with wood decking, seating, and fencing provides a pleasant outdoor space in the midst of the site’s busy urban intersection.
The library’s completely reconfigured interior revives this vital place of community learning and gathering. Its design takes advantage of historical features such as the central dome with clerestory lighting, under which a new central point circulation desk provides ease of access between library staff and patrons. A semi-circular, open reading space provides greater overall visibility while maintaining separate areas for adults, teens, and children. And a new “reading maze” now houses children’s books, peaks young visitors’ curiosity. A community room, reading room, conference room, computer stations, and an exterior urban reading garden complete the interior spaces. New roofing, new mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems were also installed.