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Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Black Creek: A Pocket of Non-Commercialism in North York Sheridan Mall

2016
2016

To enrich your Sheridan Mall shopping experience, check out Black Creek Library on the lower level between a denture clinic and a dry cleaners. A resident of the mall since 2002, Black Creek branch shares its architect, G. Bruce Stratton, with fellow mall-libraries Woodside Square and Bayview.

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2016

When I visited Black Creek for the first time, I found its cream and brown colours very inviting, drawing me into a comfortable mall-cave. Stratton’s website had not been exaggerating when it described the library’s design concept as “bright and warm with flowing lines.”

2016
2016

Responding to the coziness, the patrons looked at home in the newspaper lounge and the branch as a whole. Every computer was taken, including one screen that was surrounded by a spirited group of kids hooting at You-tube videos.

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2016

Liveliness was further supported by a dragon with flame-shaped eyebrows, a nearby pink rocket, and a series of wooden cutouts on the north wall that depicted happy kids with their arms up in the air. Two grey cardboard castles provided slightly more subdued decoration, but a closer look revealed a courtyard that sparkled with glitter.

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2013

The most distinctive feature of Black Creek was a magical reading zone whose borders were defined by a semi-circular wall about four feet high and a tiled pillar. This shiny pillar supported a round structure overhead that resembled a tiled shower-head. Hanging from the structure were delicate lights enclosed in purple and dark-red glass. Shelves built into the inside curve of the wall completed the stylish nook.

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2016
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2016
2016
2016

My husband was getting library-weary after visiting three in one afternoon, so before leaving I just took a quick glance at the ESL collection (meaty) and the multilingual shelves (diverse). Languages on offer were Spanish, Italian, Chinese, French, and Vietnamese.

IMG_1373As we left Black Creek, I reflected on how its presence at North York Sheridan Mall influences the overall atmosphere. When I saw my first mall library in Canada eight years ago, I considered the idea somewhat odd. Borrowing books seemed out of place in a zone where everything else was for sale.

However, I’ve come to appreciate the fact that mall branches like Black Creek, Bridlewood, Eglinton Square, Bayview, Woodside Square, and Maryvale provide welcome patches of public space in a larger establishment devoted to private profit. In this way, a library “redeems” a mall instead of becoming compromised by its commercialism. In my view, we need these literary reminders of the immaterial — ideas, imagination, poetry — in a world obsessed with the material.

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2013
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Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Cinnamon Warmth at Brentwood Library (1955)

Finding a parking space on Bloor Street West near Royal York Road was challenging, but my luck changed for the better when I walked into Brentwood Library for the first time. By coincidence, that particular Saturday in 2009 just happened to be Christmas Open House day!

With an angel-topped tree, carols playing in the background, and a festive cinnamon aroma heralding the presence of hot apple cider, Brentwood created a joyful holiday welcome for its patrons. Transcending a tired attempt to go through the motions, the Open House struck me as genuinely hospitable, especially when one of the librarians stationed herself behind the cookie table to serve the cider personally. Complementing the classic Christmas scene was the 1950’s atmosphere of the branch, which the clock above the hearth exemplified.

2009

Lest this solid 1955 building seem too stodgy at first description, its sunny attic was anything but heavy or repressive. A very calming, open space, it was the perfect home for the children’s collection. I spent a few minutes enjoying the attic’s high ceiling before I walked back downstairs and then descended one more flight.

As I approached the basement level, several murals painted on the stairway walls caught my eye. The bright colours provided a visual transition into the cozy room that housed the teen section as well as the Polish and French offerings. Selecting a French film and a quilt book, I returned to the cinnamon cheer of the main level for check-out.

2009

Four years and one massive renovation later, I encountered Brentwood branch for the second time. Its astonishing transformation had me asking, “Brentwood, is it really you?” However, the welcoming atmosphere and uplifting attic provided reassuring links to the Brentwood of old.

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2013

A helpful staff member told me that the former attic ceiling had been salvaged and reconstructed to shelter the east side of the upper floor, further emphasizing the continuity between Brentwood’s “before and after” profile.

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2013

As an enthusiastic fan of stained glass, I found much to appreciate in the windows of the large central space upstairs. The green and blue panes overlaid the morning’s study sessions with a blanket of peace.

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Post-renovation, the teen area had been promoted from the basement to a corner attic room that was perfect for communal study or private daydreaming. The purple and orange cushions lying in a patch of sunlight validated a reader’s need to flop on the floor with a book.

IMG_1567 Walking down the stairs to the lower level afforded an opportunity to contemplate a majestic tree from the landing’s window and the rehabilitation of the library’s naughtiest carts (stored under the stairs near the ground level emergency exit).

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Arriving on the lower level, I found the south wing to be a classy place to browse for music, read the newspaper, or marvel at an original Group of Seven painting above the hearth.

On my previous visit, the children’s section had been in the attic, but now it cheerfully inhabited the north wing of the ground level. Large letters glowed with light from tall windows and supported a phonics-inspired playground under the KidsStop logo.

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Providing continuity with the upstairs decor, stained glass on the north windows promised a colorful sunbath for patrons who chose to rest on a window bench. Situated slightly below sill-level, it was an inviting location to read in English, Polish, or French.

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2013

IMG_1652 IMG_1654IMG_1655When I left Brentwood after my 2013 visit, I felt thankful for its reader-friendly furniture, gorgeous windows, soaring ceilings, and hospitable staff. This branch is a veritable civic treasure .

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Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Inspiring Yet Pragmatic: Toronto Reference Library

When I was a tourist and potential immigrant to Toronto back in 2001, I spent several hours at the Toronto Reference Library marveling at its astonishing size and the range of its collections.

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I remember riding the glass elevator facing the curved glass, watching the inner canyon expand to reveal the silent opera-stage of readers as I rose to the top floor. I have visited Toronto Reference Library many times since 2001, and I never tire of this elevator ride.

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From the upper ramparts, the library seems like a dollhouse for miniature patrons. However, many riches can be discovered close to the ground, such as the main floor itself, the steps leading to the podium, and calming pools encircling the feet of two staircases.

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The main floor is also home to an extensive computer bay, BookEnds South and the TD Gallery. Photo taken in 2013.
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On the second floor, Humanities and Social Sciences shelves reside next to the classy Bram and Bluma Appel Salon. Additionally, this floor offers a breathing green wall, space-age study pods, and plenty of globes in the maps section.

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Currently, a major renovation is in process at Toronto Reference Library, which lends an exciting feeling of flux and change to the third floor. With cabinets temporarily uprooted and wide stretches of floor space cleared, new opportunities to see the library’s fundamental lines and shapes reveal themselves.

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Not only does the third floor contain materials related to Business, Science, and Technology, it also provides scope for gazing at the massive cosmic waffle of the skylight ceiling (symbolizing the creative tension between pragmatism and idealism).

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Wooden seats shaped like reverse Z’s on the third level appear appropriately businesslike, but they also offer front row tickets to the perpetual theatre of Yonge Street.

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The windows of the fourth floor link scholars of Languages and Literature to the world of skyscrapers in a dramatic way. Further inspiration can be found in the amazing diversity of languages available for study on this floor. The following is only a sample of the breadth of the multilingual collection at Toronto Reference Library: Arabic, Czech, Danish, Hungarian, Latvian, Bengali, Croatian, Finnish, Marathi, Romanian, Slovak, Afrikaans, Albanian, Amharic, Armenian, Basque, Esperanto, Frisian, Irish, Malayalam, Maltese, Somali, Swahili, Telugu, Welsh, and Yiddish.

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Once again, I bless the renovation for creating islands of expansive floor space upon which light can play. Photo taken in 2013.

The fifth and highest floor, host to Arts and the Picture Collection, also evokes wonder with its lofty perspectives of the city. I am especially fond of the Picture Collection, for it reminds me of rewarding hours spent gathering images for a friend’s eulogy and a memorial collage project.

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Toronto Reference Library, you deserve a standing ovation for delivering inspiration, information, and peace in the heart of downtown Toronto. Thank you for welcoming me here at the turn of the 21st century.

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Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

The Newest Incarnation of Mount Dennis Library (1951)

Since my first visit to Mount Dennis in 2009, the branch has undergone a dramatic transformation. Although I missed the official post-renovation celebration in March of 2013, I still felt excited to see a brand-new library housed in the shell of the old one when I returned to take photographs in November 2013.

IMG_1054 I liked how G. Bruce Stratton Architects combined grandeur and accessibility with classical columns and the wide open staircase in the centre of the building, all within the limits of 11,350 square feet.

IMG_0966As I walked the perimeter of the main floor, a variety of stylish yet comfortable reading perches presented themselves.

IMG_0980The Urban Living Room along the west wall lived up to its name, for the patrons there looked at home and relaxed. The only exception was a man who became so flustered when his cell phone rang that he darted out the emergency exit, only to set off the alarm, which flustered him more deeply.

Further along the west wall near the entrance were some unoccupied benches. While I was taking pictures there, a curious patron asked me what I saw in the benches. I told him that I enjoyed the play of light, the angles, and the shapes. This led to an interesting conversation about photography, art, negative space, and the importance of libraries. It was great!

IMG_1040After giving the man my card, I went downstairs to see the Children’s Area and Program Rooms. Gracing the inner sides of the rectangular frame that contained the stairway were alphabet streams flowing with cascades of vertical letters.

IMG_0938With a large space devoted to a KidsStop early literacy centre, the lower floor was alive with colour. According to the information leaflet that the branch head kindly gave me, “Photography is the theme” of Mount Dennis library’s KidsStop. “For many years the Kodak plant, now closed, was a major fixture of the community.”

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A media wall invited engagement thanks to its screens with photo loops, a reading nook, and even a puppet theatre. I especially enjoyed seeing the children’s artwork chosen for photo-loop display.

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Puppet theatre patiently waiting for puppets.

KidsStop’s wooden “kiosks” offered great educational fun with an artistic flair. The marbles, film strips and stained glass struck me as particularly imaginative details.

IMG_0816Secured to the wall for easy page-turning, Zoran Milich’s The City ABC Book inspired fresh visions of literacy. I loved the way this giant book taught me how to look for letters in the shapes and forms I encounter every day in the city.

The City ABC Book by Zoran Milich
The City ABC Book by Zoran Milich

In a large room behind the KidsStop, potential for puppetry was increased with the presence of a puppet hut. It was also a place to view old photos of the neighbourhood and local artwork by students from Bala Public School.

IMG_0764When I wrote my first post about Mount Dennis in 2009, I described it as art-friendly, and I am so glad that the new version of the branch has stayed true to its dedication to celebrating children’s art.

IMG_0734In the northeast corner of the lower floor, I discovered two glass study cubes. During my 2013 visit, a tutor and child were working on a French lesson together. As I took photographs of giant filmstrips along the east wall, pleasing phrases such as “Le chat est sur la table” and “Le chat est dans le tiroir” rang out from the study corner.

IMG_0920I also enjoyed how the morning sun created magical effects on the decorative films strips. However, the strips were not just for show; the Mount Dennis information leaflet explained that they also served as practical magnetic substrates for displays of children’s artwork.

Before I left the library, I selected some books from the multilingual collection, which included Vietnamese, Spanish, and French. (Four years previously, Portuguese and Korean were part of the collection too, perhaps a reflection of changing demographics).

IMG_1086IMG_1082Thank you, Mount Dennis, for encouraging art, quiet reflection, Saturday French lessons, and new ways of looking at our world!

 

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Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Family-Friendly Perth/Dupont (1983)

Window art by Penelope Keith.
Window art by Penelope Keith.

When I found Perth/Dupont Library after a pleasant stroll in the Junction, I was struck by how architectually-integrated the branch seemed. It looked like it had been lovingly tucked into its storefront room by the surrounding community.

Similar in size to Davenport Library, Perth/Dupont’s interior was off-white with olive trim and featured an exposed grey heating duct that snaked around three walls.

IMG_0517IMG_0426 IMG_0575Not only was the library building in harmony with its neighbourhood, community artwork that decorated the interior also reflected the local style of architecture.

IMG_0582IMG_0482 On my first visit in 2010, a blue alligator had kept watch from a platform above a square column built into the southeast corner of the library. And on a matching platform in the southwest corner, two white teddy bears with red-ribbon bow-ties served as guardians of their domain. In 2013, artwork had replaced alligator and bears, but luckily some photographic evidence of the blue gator remains (providing a solid clue that my camera skills have improved).

IMG_0552My 2013 visit also revealed a vision of flowers behind the bookshelves. Placed there to catch the rich southern light, the flowers delighted me with their winter-defying spirit.

IMG_0533IMG_0534IMG_0538Near the centre of the south wall was a heavy wooden frame that supported a large dragon face. This creature was a very toothy specimen indeed, and it sported a fang overbite without braces.

IMG_0497Not outwardly intimidated by the dragon, I sat at a table between the Portuguese collection and the checkout desk for a few hours, soaking up a typical weekday afternoon at a branch that appeared to be a second home to the families who brought their kids to read and play.

IMG_0586When patrons came in, the librarian at the desk greeted them by name, including the smallest ones. What’s more, she engaged in relaxed conversations with the parents and didn’t yell when a few rambunctious kids crawled inside the paperback display frames. When the game of chase grew more wild, mindful moms said, “Remember we were going to practice our inside voices? This is a library, not a playground.”

IMG_0527Even though Perth/Dupont is not technically a playground, I liked how the kids showed a natural sense of ownership; they knew it was their library even if, in their exuberance, they may have tested the acceptable limits of indoor decibels. What better testimony to Perth/Dupont’s genuine welcome to local families!IMG_0520

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Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Northern Elms: Refuge for the Strip-Mall Weary

2013
2013

Disguised as an unassuming beige box, Northern Elms Library (2005) proved to be an oasis in a concrete desert. Although strip-malls along Kipling and Rexdale compassed it round, this small branch offered quiet and sunlight to its urban patrons.

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2013

From a black cushioned chair in front of the east window, I absorbed solar energy while I admired Northern Elms’ compactness. Moderately busy on an October Saturday, the library’s entire holdings fit into one room.

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2013

Dark orange, creamy yellow, and pale green covered the walls, and the floor tiles echoed these colours in both swirly and linear patterns. Composed almost entirely of glass, the south wall easily delivered light for the entire outfit and nourished extrovert flowers beside a wooden lattice.

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Hovering from the ceiling in the Children’s section was a circular structure that looked like a UFO mothership. However, it differed from commonplace spaceships in that it was tricked out with four dainty hanging lamps.

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Closer to the ground, a yellow table top in the shape of a fried egg was joined by a red chair with a heart-shaped back, a yellow one with a flower back, and a green smiley-face chair.

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This corner of the library wasn’t just about the cheery furniture, though. On my first visit in 2009, gravitas was added by mysterious images of spiral galaxies and nebulas on a nearby bulletin board. When I returned in 2013 to take pictures of the branch, the board’s theme was “Fall Into Reading.”

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2013

Don’t let Northern Elms’ small size fool you. Its grounded yet cosmic appeal transcends gas stations, money markets, power lines, and parking lots.

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Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Sunlight and Triangles at Amesbury Park (1967)

2012
2013

When I saw Amesbury Park for the first time, I liked how it rested in front of a grassy mound of parkland on the south side of Lawrence Avenue West. Its interior had the care-worn look of a neighbourhood facility in high demand, but the library still defined space in interesting ways.

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2013

For example, a curved purple screen marked the border between the lobby and the Children’s area and served as additional back support for a cushioned red bench.

On my initial visit in 2009, the wave-shaped divider contained an open porthole that encouraged patrons to imagine a submarine universe, but the portal was absent in 2013.

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Nevertheless, plenty of windows remained to illuminate the collections, including two giant triangular skylights and many large windows that faced the park.

2013
2013

As the photographs suggest, triangle shapes abounded in this purposeful yet relaxed parkside branch. However, lest I float off in a reverie of sunlight and triangles, I should mention the large ESL section and offerings in French, Spanish, Gujarati, Hindi, Italian, and Vietnamese. (By 2013, the Tamil collection had moved to Downsview branch). IMG_1815 IMG_1822After admiring the multilingual collections, I moved on to Romance. While I was crouching down to examine the spine of a novel called Armed and Devastating, the lights went off briefly, signaling the library’s imminent closure. I enjoyed a few seconds of bathing in natural light — silver and blue on a late autumn afternoon — and gathered up my notebook and book sale items. Then I left Amesbury Park, my eighty-sixth branch, with the sense of an afternoon well-spent.IMG_1813IMG_1829

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Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Unconventionally Beautiful Eatonville Library (1967)

2012

Eatonville Library resides at the intersection of Burnhamthorpe and Highway 427. A reconstruction of the building occurred in 2000, but heavy use has since tarnished some of its millennial shine. I sensed a more gritty vibe from this popular branch whose patrons’ cultural diversity reminded me of branches closer to my home in Scarborough, such as Fairview, Albert Campbell, and Cedarbrae.

2012
2012

On my first visit in 2009, I noticed a man praying on his knees behind the paperback carrels, rising and then returning to rest his forehead on the floor again and again. Not far from the devout man, library materials were on offer in Chinese, Serbian, Korean, Polish, Punjabi, Spanish, and French.

Eatonville’s children’s section was vast and well-stocked with English and multilingual books, but graffiti carved into the wooden window bench provided more urban realism than the library was probably looking for. While I like graffiti as a form of expression, it troubled me to see swear words embedded in a library bench.

2012

Even the stuffed animals that lined two high shelves had seen more prosperous times; many of them were stained with magic marker, fur-tattered, and ready for retirement. Nevertheless, the sheer volume of the stuffed assembly was impressive: a frog lying on his back, a bunny, a duck, a blue and green bumblebee, a blue dog, a burgundy elephant, a clown, an electric-lime-green bear, a black hen, and a panda bear in a blue snow suit. (On my 2012 visit, I noticed that some of the more worn animals had been removed).

2012
2015
2015

As I waited in a long line to check out a travel DVD, I gazed up at the high ceiling and appreciated the calm it afforded. In fact, several station points in the library provided uncluttered views and a sense of openness.

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2015
2015
2015

Walking back to the car, I admired the tall grasses planted around the perimeter of the building and a footpath composed of recycled manhole covers, now permanently free from the constant press of Toronto’s vehicles.

2012
2012

As I looked in my rear view mirror, the asymmetrical hulk of the library struck me as resembling a silver ocean-liner docked at the highway’s edge or possibly a gray whale taking a rest. Whether ship or mammal, I felt grateful for Eatonville’s vitality, commitment to diversity, and unconventional architectural beauty.

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Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

The Cool Colours of Oakwood Village (1997)

Cool concrete rectangles defined my first visual impression of Oakwood Village Library. The building’s calming interior colours, especially the mottled blue and grey accent walls, were a balm to thirsty eyes.

oakwood_village1IMG_2199Even though Oakwood Village’s straight lines and concrete stairs reminded me of a university library, the lively clientele prevented  academic dust from accumulating. For example, a joyfully chaotic face-painting event had just broken up when I turned up to see the library for the first time.

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Phalanxes of strollers streamed toward the exit, only slowed by a few recalcitrant toddlers in the collector lane. Wide aisles kept the traffic flowing peacefully.

On the east side of the room, an expanse of carpeted floor awaited the next storytelling audience. This open area’s only decorations were three art pieces by Barbara Reid. My favourite one depicted a father and daughter in a supermarket. I loved how Reid was able to make the plasticine glow with textile warmth.

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Artwork by Barbara Reid

The upper floor also had a very roomy east side, although it appeared slightly less spacious because of the armchairs for newspaper-browsers. Actually, the second floor was almost exactly the same size and shape as the main level, except for a narrow open space on its north side. I looked down the gap as I leaned against the ledge, catching a glimpse of artistic activity below.

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Near the ledge were a couple of wide black chairs whose high backs contained large uniform holes. These leather chairs furnished the Teen Section, so it wasn’t surprising that I saw two actual teens interacting in them. One kid remained seated while a friend pretended to punch his head through the holes. Clearly, this was not a love-seat.

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I moved away from the edifying scene to gaze at shelves filled with books in French, Tagalog, and Italian (Spanish and Portuguese were no longer available at this branch in 2013).

IMG_2384IMG_2387IMG_2381With only one floor left to visit, I trotted down to the basement to see the theatre. However, the door was locked, so I returned to the main level and studied a giant paper snowflake and authentic snow creating patterns on the skylights near the north wall.

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2014
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2014

In response to the snow, knitted blankets and scarves provided the perfect warming backdrop to a display of new books on the ground level. Fortified by the cozy textiles, I left Oakwood Village full of gratitude for this literary sanctuary filled with hospitable light.

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Categories
Artwork General

Two Collages for Dad

From the depths of keepsake piles in my mother’s house emerged a Father’s Day card and a birthday gift that I made in the 1970’s. IMG_7105The inside of the Father’s Day card contained a car and some of my thoughts.IMG_7107

Dear dad, I know that your are going to have a happy Father's day because me and Joe well I don't know about Joe but I am going to give you a break and be good for once. Love, Catherine
Dear dad, I know that your are going to have a happy Father’s day because me and Joe well I don’t know about Joe but I am going to give you a break and be good for once. Love, Catherine

IMG_6846The Father’s Day message became the centerpiece for a recent collage in his honor.

Dear Dad, Catherine Raine 2015
Dear Dad, Catherine Raine 2015
Dear Dad, Catherine Raine 2015
Dear Dad, Catherine Raine 2015
Dear Dad, Catherine Raine 2015
Dear Dad, Catherine Raine 2015

The second piece of 1970’s ephemera was a birthday gift for my dad. It was a hand-taped envelope made from lined notebook paper that contained watches that I’d cut out from magazines.  (The coffee stain is original).IMG_7145IMG_7146The long-ago selected watch photos and text from the card inspired a second collage for my father.

I Couldn't Afford the Real Thing, Catherine Raine 2015
I Couldn’t Afford the Real Thing, Catherine Raine 2015
I Couldn't Afford the Real Thing, Catherine Raine 2015
I Couldn’t Afford the Real Thing, Catherine Raine 2015
I Couldn't Afford the Real Thing, Catherine Raine 2015
I Couldn’t Afford the Real Thing, Catherine Raine 2015
I Couldn't Afford the Real Thing, Catherine Raine 2015
I Couldn’t Afford the Real Thing, Catherine Raine 2015
I Couldn't Afford the Real Thing, Catherine Raine 2015
I Couldn’t Afford the Real Thing, Catherine Raine 2015

Dad, thank you for keeping the cards that I made for you so many years ago. And thank you most of all for being such a fun, supportive, and loving father. I miss you!

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Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Don Mills (1962): From Art to Zombies

As I walked through the lobby of Don Mills Library, a title in a book display briefly stopped my momentum: I Kissed a Zombie and I Liked It. Then I walked into the library proper and gazed upward to get a sense of the place.

“Warehouse” was the first word that came to mind to describe the main floor, but after a few moments I reconsidered. Although the large square interior reminded me of a box-store, its decorations saved the atmosphere from soullessness.

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2015

For instance, I have never seen a warehouse that displayed paper snowflakes. Nor have I observed an endearing bunny and elephant sharing a hot air balloon basket.

2011 (Balloon basket and kites were not in evidence in 2015)
2011

I also loved the soaring kites in the rafters, perfect for such an expansive ceiling.

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2015

Over in the children’s section on the west side, I noticed the story-telling steps and play area, where wooden walls created a distinctive space for drama.

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The Young Adult wing on the opposite side of the main level also fostered a special sense of place, for its wall-to-floor windows on two sides invited openness and relaxation.

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After admiring the east wing, I trotted downstairs. There, I noticed a more traditional library atmosphere, and the basement stacks reminded me of college libraries in the Midwest. The lower level at Don Mills also offered an auditorium, a meeting room, a small study room, and facilities for an Adult Literacy program.

Returning to the upper level, I puzzled some fellow patrons by taking photographs of books. I especially wanted a picture of a “Quick Picks” bag because I’d never seen this innovative option at other TPL branches. The bag contained four books chosen by a librarian, and the commands to “Grab a bag. Borrow them All!” served to combat indecisive dithering at the shelves.

As a district branch with a robust book collection, Don Mills definitely spoils its users for choice. For example, the large French collection yielded a petit vampire with a tail like a turnip root and Jeannot and Margot (or Hansel and Gretel en anglais).

In addition to French, Japanese and Chinese had substantial representation, and there were smaller collections of materials in German, Arabic, Spanish, Persian, and Hindi.

Indeed, Don Mills covered the gamut of the library experience from Art to Zombies. This was more than enough reason for a happy shadow dance!

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2015

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Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Importantly Groovy City Hall (1965)

City Hall Library is that rare branch that can pull off coziness and decorum at the same time. Its size (5,074 square feet) makes it seem approachable, but a lofty ceiling and serious grey walls show the appropriate level of dignity required for co-residency with Toronto’s municipal government offices.

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2015

In addition to being cozy and important, City Hall is also decidedly groovy. In fact, grooviness prevents City Hall from taking itself too seriously, as evidenced by the funky carpet in the children’s section, a triangles-on-acid painting, and the lively view of Nathan Phillips Square available from the south-facing windows.

On City Hall visit in 2011, I was in good company when it came to enjoying the chairs at the south windows, for I noticed piles of magazines left behind by previous afternoon readers. (A staff member told me that there are lines out the door during lunch hour). Stacked at random on a long stone bench were slightly rumpled editions of People, Hello, Popular Science, Spiderman, and Vogue.

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2015
2015
2015

One weighty tome stood tall among the fluffier reading fare on the bench: Canada: An Illustrated History. And I personally added several more books to the piles of reading material: Let It Shine, Besa, and Twilight in Chinese.

In spite of City Hall’s businesslike vibe, it contained lot of interesting nooks and angles that offered respite from the brisk pace of metropolitan life. For example, the children’s section was tucked away in the corner where two curved walls met. There, disc-shaped cushions silently invited readers to settle more comfortably into a beam of sunlight.

2011

IMG_2404IMG_2429Most quirky and mysterious of all was a partially hidden staircase which led nowhere, Escher-style. As I was taking pictures on the 2011 trip, I noticed a man in a suit walk down the top steps and then disappear behind the walls that hid the bottom half of the stairs. He quickly reappeared at the top, looking confused.

2011

When I asked a staff member about the steps, she explained that the library used to occupy more space (11,000 square feet) in the larger City Hall building. In 1996, a substantial part the library’s collection was transferred to Urban Affairs. That’s when the stairs were walled off from the current library space.

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2015

I hope the discombobulated man eventually found the exit he sought. And may multitudes of patrons continue to find their way to this groovy place of relaxation in the heart of the city!IMG_2433

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Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

July Afternoon at Palmerston Branch (1971)

2012
2012

Located just west of Bathurst on Bloor, Palmerston Library is small in size but hugely popular. Each time I visit this branch, it is packed to capacity with readers, web-surfers, and shelf-browsers.

At first impression, square angles and white paint seemed overly prominent at Palmerston, but what saved it from institutional blandness was a display of 2009’s Summer Reading Club illustrations near the entrance. These pictorial book reports contained time machines, fire engines, dragons, and volcanoes (among many other items).

To the left of the entrance, a wizard kite flew overhead in a floppy purple hat that was part-toque, part-nightcap. Wire-rim spectacles and a long gray beard reinforced his scholarly image, as did the reserved manner in which he had tucked his hands into drawn-on sleeves. (The wizard’s arms were actually more like implied limbs, for they served as the kite’s side flaps). The rest of the wizard’s body was one very long purple swoosh of kite material, spanning the children’s section diagonally.

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The wizard had disappeared when I returned to the branch in 2012 to take some photographs. Having served the library for many years with distinction, the wizard’s tenure had come to an end.

When Palmerston opened in the early 1970’s, it was a children’s library. Almost forty years later, the children’s books are still plentiful, including lots of French ones, even though the branch now caters to teenagers and adults as well.

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The adult section offered a plentiful supply of Korean materials and some Spanish ones. Also, a small Local History Collection displayed titles such as The Riot at Christie Pits, The Annex, and Honest Ed Mirvish: How to Build an Empire on an Orange Crate.

Honest Ed‘s brilliantly corny signs weren’t visible from my table near the computers, but I didn’t mind. My favourite aspect of Palmerston is its ability to provide a scholarly shelter from the bustle and noise of nearby Bloor Street. Palmerston, thank you for your peaceful atmosphere, children’s art, wizard kite, colourful books, and neighbourly attitude.

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Categories
General Photography Poems and Prose Poems

Creek to River Adventure in Toronto

When I descended the steps at the beginning of a three-hour trek from Taylor Massey Park to the Don River Valley, a multitude of surprises awaited me.

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Victoria Park Avenue entrance to the park

IMG_6881Along the trail, I discovered green palaces reflected in the creek, a memorial bench wreathed in wildflowers, animal sculptures carved from a fallen tree, and the sight of a chipmunk speeding to its burrow.

"In memory of Joseph Crawford (1956-1995). Never forgotten. Always in our hearts."
“In memory of Joseph Crawford (1956-1995). Never forgotten. Always in our hearts.”

IMG_6950Flowers and chains framed the beauty of the stream, and wavy reflections of tree trunks served as pillars for a temple of nature.

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IMG_7016 The first trail marker for the Lower Don appeared after an hour and fifteen minutes of walking. This was exciting because I had never witnessed the transition from Taylor Massey Creek to the Don River before.

The Don River and Canoe Conversation Piece

Much as I love the sheltered flow of a woodland creek, the impact of seeing the waterway widen and deepen in capacity astonished me. My chest expanded, my breath deepened, and I felt freer, bigger, and more open.

IMG_7059IMG_7071Ten minutes into the Lower Don section of the walk, I noticed a short dirt trail leading to a lookout on an elevated bank. With the camera looped around my wrist, I fell into a reverie while looking at the opaque water and began to daydream about the Missouri River (my home river). Suddenly, a very large pink and white fish jumped high above the surface and splashed with panache back into the river.

I was so startled that I almost dropped my camera. However, I was not upset in the least, for it was a privilege to have been shaken up by that feisty fish. Its breathtaking leap made me feel alive and gave me hope for the health of the river.

IMG_7079Tired but refreshed by so much beauty, I continued the journey, noticing a family of geese, graffiti murals at the base of a soaring bridge, and an artist painting a shimmering river portrait in olive green, brown, and ocher.

IMG_7103Near the end of the hike, I encountered historic Todmorden Mills at the foot of a steep incline up Pottery Road. I had almost reached the top of the hill, panting from exertion and the extreme heat, when the final surprise of the day greeted me: a Dairy Queen right at the summit!

In my personal history of ice-cream consumption, never has a plain vanilla cone tasted as good as the magical one purchased on Pottery Road that afternoon. It was the perfect ending to an adventure made possible by Toronto’s generous creeks, powerful rivers, and unpredictable wildlife.

Categories
Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Historic Yet Responsive Gerrard/Ashdale (1924)

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Mural by Shayona Panth in collaboration with Supurna Ghosh (2009). Photo taken in 2013.
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Mural by Shayona Panth in collaboration with Suparna Ghosh (2009). Photo taken in 2013.
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Mural by Shayona Panth in collaboration with Suparna Ghosh (2009). Photo taken in 2013.

Before I even stepped inside Gerrard/Ashdale Library, its unique flair proclaimed itself from an outdoor mural. Decorating the sides of a concrete platform rising from the sidewalk, the mural featured elephants, the Taj Mahal, a lotus flower, a tiger, a dancer, and a peacock. These lively images in the foreground provided a contrast to the classical building in the background, which embodied the solid assurance of a structure that has presided on this corner since 1924.

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When I first visited Gerrard/Ashdale several years back, the upper story’s wooden beams and fireplace made a big impression on me. With five strong wooden braces and an inviting hearth, this large open room looked more like a fabulous attic in a C.S. Lewis book than an ordinary library wing. Enhancing the magic, a large textile art piece that sparkled with tiny mirrors hung from a brass rod above the mantle.

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This piece was above the hearth mantle in 2009. In 2013, preliminary sketches of the murals outside the building rested on the mantle.
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Artwork by Shayona Panth

On nearby shelves were resources in Urdu, Hindi, Gujurati, Bengali, and Chinese. The dark woodwork set off their covers nicely, and the books also looked naturally artistic on top of a long shelving unit.

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IMG_1636 IMG_1628 The south wing of the attic housed the children’s section. I liked how the ceiling sloped at an angle towards the windows facing Gerrard Street, creating a garret atmosphere where a poet or a child could feel at home. A wooden puppet theatre was tucked under the low eave, and a chess game on the nearby table waited for its players to return.

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I gazed up at two skylights and then briefly sat down beside a round window that comprised most of the east wall of the children’s room. A butterfly mobile inches from my forehead, I gazed at Kohinoor Foods across Ashdale Street, where commerce spilled onto the pavement in the form of green milk crates stacked with purple and yellow onions, grapes, and string beans.

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Returning to the main floor, I considered checking out some books on Indian textiles. Although I didn’t have any materials to feed the returns monkey, I left Gerrard/Ashdale with happy memories of a historic branch that responds to the needs of diverse 21st-century Torontonians.

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Categories
Artwork General

Frog Tree, Flower Tree, Toad and Heron Collages

Michelle's Frog Tree, Catherine Raine 2015
Michelle’s Frog Tree, Catherine Raine 2015
Michelle's Frog Tree, Catherine Raine 2015
Michelle’s Frog Tree, Catherine Raine 2015
Michelle's Frog Tree, Catherine Raine 2015
Michelle’s Frog Tree, Catherine Raine 2015
Michelle's Frog Tree, Catherine Raine 2015
Michelle’s Frog Tree, Catherine Raine 2015
Toad of Encouragement, Catherine Raine 2015
Toad of Encouragement, Catherine Raine 2015
Toad of Encouragement, Catherine Raine 2015
Toad of Encouragement, Catherine Raine 2015
Denise's Heron, Catherine Raine 2015
Denise’s Heron, Catherine Raine 2015
Denise's Heron, Catherine Raine 2015
Denise’s Heron, Catherine Raine 2015
Categories
Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Quietly Canadian Mimico Centennial (1967)

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IMG_1916The first time I visited Mimico Centennial Library, it was a rainy winter afternoon in 2009. As I walked up the path to this neighbourhood branch, I noticed that its grounds were more extensive than many libraries located in land-strapped downtown. Long benches rested on a courtyard, hinting at future summer relaxation under the trees.

IMG_1907Mimico Centennial’s interior was equally spacious, with floor-to-ceiling front windows and an uncluttered atmosphere. One of the windows featured paper icebergs, snowflakes, and polar bear families floating in a carefree manner. Other windows in the branch came with blue leather window seats, and I was especially delighted with one quiet corner where the seat afforded a view of a fir tree, an ideal spot to compose poems, text messages, and journal entries.

In addition to its daydreaming facilities, I was impressed by the size of Mimico Centennial’s Polish collection, which filled almost two-thirds of one entire wall of shelving. The other third was comprised of materials in Russian, with Spanish and ESL also making a respectable showing. In addition, the Children’s section had a number of books in French.

Shifting my gaze from the shelves to the ceiling, my curiosity was intrigued by an upper level that could be reached by iron staircases on either side. This platform occupied part of the ceiling space of the main floor and served as a study area (similar in structure to the minstrel galleries at Wychwood, High Park, and Beaches branches).

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The north stairs beckoned, so I went up to investigate the platform. When I reached the upper floor, I was surprised but not displeased to find mostly empty space. Only a few tables distracted from the vast expanse of carpet, and I saw just one educational display, a literacy tool featuring twenty-six paper frogs stuck to the west wall. Each frog was wearing a letter on its belly, and lists of words which started with that particular letter were written underneath. Six of the alphabet-loving amphibians were still patiently waiting for their words: frogs J, K, Q, V, X, and Z.

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After descending the south staircase to return to the main level, I found a Bollywood DVD and trotted over to the checkout desk, where a personable librarian bade me to enjoy my selection. Then I ran down to the basement level to admire a glossy round table made from a giant tree-trunk. The carvings of wolves, buffalo, beavers, deer, foxes, and maple leaves provided the perfect patriotic symbolism to celebrate an edifice constructed one hundred years after Canadian federation.

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Categories
Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Formerly Rural Rexdale (1959)

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When I stepped into Rexdale Library’s lobby on my first visit, I spent several minutes studying a historical display about the library. It included a fascinating newspaper clipping that showed how rural Kipling Heights used to be in 1955.Though not as empty as the field in the photograph, Rexdale wasn’t crowded on the afternoon of my first visit. Near the west wall, a couple of elderly men reminisced about post-war TTC fares that cost six cents.IMG_2514IMG_2515IMG_2560A few shelves away from the gentlemen’s table were books and DVD’s in languages that were rarely heard in Kipling Heights fifty-five years ago: Gujarati, Punjabi, Spanish, and Hindi. Complementing the multilingual materials, a paper tree bearing name-fruit provided more examples of Rexdale’s rich diversity.IMG_2433 IMG_2430The tree was located to the left of a C-shaped bench under the west bay windows where Lola Bunny, Dora the Explorer, Winnie the Pooh, Pikachu, and an Anime Warrior Girl dwelled.IMG_2399IMG_2522Opposite the windows, a wooden sliding screen completed the circle started by the window seat. The screen’s flexibility made it possible to enclose the area and define it as separate from the rest of the library. Emphasizing the room’s singularity, a circular depression in the middle suggested a woodland pond.IMG_2420Two carpeted steps led readers down to the pool, providing a suitable transition from land to water. With late afternoon sunlight shining through the bay windows, this otherwise ordinary branch was transformed into a cartoon gallery.

The effect was even more theatrical on a return visit in October 2014, for the paper tree had turned scary for the season and atmospheric cobwebs draped the room.

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IMG_0629IMG_0726 IMG_0715cobwebwarriorRexdale Library, thank you for your history, diversity, cartoon characters, and willingness to celebrate the changing seasons!

Categories
Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

Peace and Love at Taylor Memorial (1985)

The story of Taylor Memorial Library is a love story. In 1962, Fred Taylor donated his 1921 family home to the Scarborough Public Library Board as a memorial to his first wife, Florence Nightengale Taylor. After twenty-two years as a library, the house near Kingston and Warden was demolished and the current building opened in 1985 on the same site.

When I visited Taylor Memorial for the second time in 2011, I realized that I had previously overlooked a black and white photograph of Florence Taylor in a long formal gown. A lovely flowering vine curled around her photo on the white mat between the picture and the frame. To the right of Florence’s tribute were photographs of Fred Taylor and his second wife, Kate.

I was sorry that the original Taylor house no longer remained because I would like to have seen it. The next best thing was a painting of the 1921 home which hung above the east side of the fireplace. The artist, Nikita Marner, presented the viewer with a tall fairy-tale cottage distinguished by a timbered exterior.

Painting by Nikita Marner
2011

Befitting a library whose origins were rooted in an actual house, the current Taylor Memorial building struck me as more home-like than many of the other TPL branches. As I took in the library’s interior, I was impressed by how faithfully it upheld the spirit of the Taylor’s gift: a home to serve as a sanctuary for quiet reading and reflection.

I hope Fred and Kate would have been pleased that I found Taylor Memorial to be the least institutional of all the seventy-four branches I had visited before I encountered it. Each piece of furniture was just right for settling down for a good long read, including the lawn chairs on the covered patio by the garden, the  armchairs near the fireplace, and the semi-circular cushioned window seat in front of a bay window.

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Three elegant paintings of the Scarborough Bluffs (one of the original cliffs in Yorkshire and the others of the local Ontario version) also made the interior space feel more domestic. They served as reminders of the real lake that beckoned in a sparkly manner just a few miles away.

The Bluffs in Moonlight (1928). Donated to Township of Scarborough in 1962 by Mrs. E. Ashford

On the south wall, an arched stained glass window lent a sacred element to the relaxing atmosphere. Echoing the floral embellishments on Florence Taylor’s photo, translucent butterflies and a few birds fluttered attendance on a flowering vine that filled most of the window.

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With its high windows, refined paintings, garden views, and comfortable surfaces, Taylor Memorial branch invited peace into the soul. If you are a visionary or just someone who loves to read in a state of restful abandon, I highly recommend a pilgrimage to this harmonious library. Taylor Memorial’s reader-friendly aesthetic embodies the loving spirit of its benefactors, Fred and Kate Taylor.

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Categories
Toronto Public Library Pilgrimage of 100 Branches

A Transformed Kennedy/Eglinton Branch

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On a summer evening in 2009, I walked from my house to Liberty Square Shopping Plaza to attend a celebration of the freshly renovated Kennedy/Eglinton branch. Architects had repurposed the seedy bar next door, turning it into a library extension complete with a computer lab, community room, reading lounge and automated checkout area.

More than doubling the space, the expansion and renovation has made Kennedy/Eglinton Library almost unrecognizable compared to its pre-2009 manifestation. What had once been a cramped outpost of learning is now a spacious establishment that brightens Liberty Square.

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From the polished tiles in the new entryway to the sparkly wall panels in the Teen’s area, the entire facility embodies hope in new beginnings. The improved Kennedy/Eglinton branch also offers many textured spaces, corners, and rooms that contain a variety of furniture: plush armchairs, a study nook with three-cornered bench, and a window seat in the children’s section.

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On the evening of my 2009 visit, patrons of all ages had come out to experience the new library, and they occupied almost every table, computer and study area. As I wandered through the rooms, impressed by their vitality, I appreciated the linguistic diversity reflected in shelves stocked with Chinese, Tamil, and Hindi materials. The community room was surprisingly quiet, but signs of recent social activity lingered, including paper cups heaped in the trash and an empty silver tray smeared with blue and white icing.

However, minor disappointment over a missed cake opportunity could not spoil the grateful mood inspired by this expanded branch in Scarborough Junction. The building’s makeover has not only improved its architectural looks; it has made the area feel safer. Before 2009, I used to feel intimidated to walk over to the library at night and drop off books because bar patrons would be perched on the outside window ledges of the library underneath signs that said, “Do not sit near the drop box.” Post-renovation, a former tavern tarnished by reports of criminal assault has been transformed into a handsome place of learning that serves as a community sanctuary. Long may its light shine!

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