The William Penn Foundation is extending its longtime role
as primary benefactor of the Free Library of Philadelphia by awarding the
library the biggest grant in the history of either institution.
The Free Library will receive $25 million from William Penn
over three years, helping to pay for renovations at the Central Library
downtown, plus the renovation and expansion of five neighborhood branches in
South Philadelphia, central North Philadelphia, Logan, Tacony, and Mount Airy.
The money does not make possible a Moshe Safdie-commissioned
annex long dreamed of for a plot of land just north of the library's Beaux Arts
building on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway. But it will provide a physical
intermediate step by establishing new flow through the current building to
eventually link it with the annex, while money continues to be sought for that
larger expansion.
Old storage stacks on six levels on the north side of the
building will be demolished, and three new levels will replace them. On the
first floor will go what the library is calling "the common," a
flexible, 8,000-square-foot lobbylike space that will eventually lead into the
new addition. One level below will be a center for business-building and career
assistance. Below that, compact shelving will replace much of the storage
capacity of the six levels of stacks, but in a much more condensed space.
William Penn's gesture aims to help bridge not just a
physical space, but a financial one as well. The foundation hopes its gift to
the library - which accounts for a substantial share of the foundation's giving
budget for the next three years, about 8 percent - will shake loose the balance
of the money needed for the expansion.
How did the foundation arrive at a figure of $25 million?
"More than half the city uses the library, people from every neighborhood,
every income bracket, every age. Everyone's welcome at the library," said
Janet Haas, vice chair of the foundation's board of directors. "It's a big
institution that touches everybody, and we wanted this to be transformative in
terms of people's access. This allows us to get it started in a major way, but
also to garner other resources."
"The William Penn gift is a vote of confidence,"
said Free Library president and director Siobhan Reardon. "It gives us the
ability to deliver on our dreams and to really engage the larger philanthropic
community around a project like this." Reardon said the renovations are
the architectural manifestation of a recent shift in mission that concentrates
on job-seekers, pre-K children, entrepreneurs and small-business owners, new
Americans, people with disabilities, and consumers of medical and health-care
information.
"The reality is, if you want to be all things to all
people, you're going to fail," she said, noting that staff has been
reconfigured to accommodate the new mandate.
Both the branch and the downtown renovations fall under a
campaign the library has branded as "Building Inspiration: 21st Century
Libraries," which includes not only the renovations, but also the
establishment of an Innovation Fund to test new programs and services and
expanded involvement with Philadelphia public schools.
This evolving institutional philosophy spoke to William
Penn, whose executive director, Laura Sparks, stressed the increasing role of
the library in providing literacy assistance and services for immigrants and
job-seekers. She said that with schools and churches closing, "even more
needs are emerging." The latest gift from William Penn shows "a
commitment by the family to being in it for the long haul," Sparks said.
The total budget for renovating and outfitting the five branches
is about $30 million, of which $17 million will come from the William Penn
grant. The round of renovations aims to create prototype branches with more
flexible spaces, rolling circulation desks, and shelves that can be moved for
special events, and the establishment of services unique to each neighborhood.
The five branches are the Lillian Marrero Library on West Lehigh Avenue; Logan
Library on Wagner Avenue; a new community center to be added to Lovett Memorial
Library on Germantown Avenue in Mount Airy; the South Philadelphia branch on
Broad Street being built into a new Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
building; and the Tacony Library on Torresdale Avenue.
Of the $30 million needed for the five neighborhood sites,
the library has firm commitments of $25 million, with active requests pending
for the remainder.
The creation of the new spaces at the Central Library is
budgeted at $28.5 million, of which $8 million will come from the William Penn
gift. An additional $10 million is needed to reach the goal.
Design work on the annex, to be realized by Safdie
Architects, based just outside of Boston, is still at a halt as fund-raising
progresses, though Safdie is the architect for the more modest imminent
renovations at the Central Library. The expansion, which would someday extend
the library building north across Wood Street, is estimated to be a $90 million
project, said a library fund-raiser.
The latest William Penn gift exceeds the foundation's
second-largest gift ever - a 1996 grant, also to the Free Library, of $18
million (though measured in inflation-adjusted terms, the earlier gift is
larger, translating to $27.3 million in 2013 dollars). The 1996 grant helped
pay for some level of renovations, from modest to substantial, to 52 branches,
and William Penn feels it was money well spent, in no small part because it
lured additional funding from foundations and government.
Said Haas: "It exceeded what we expected, and our
expectations were not low."
Source: Philly.com
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