South End Library Reopens after Four Months, with Many Kudos to FOSEL for the Success of their Public/Private Partnership to Pay for the Renovations
(Above: Marleen Nienhuis, president of FOSEL, and David Leonard, president of the BPL)
Since October 2019, Southenders have torn their hair out about not knowing where to go for neighborhood meetings, yoga classes, children’s stories, computer access, income tax assistance, movies, books, DVDs, museum passes, reserved book pickups, newspapers, magazines, a trip to the public restroom, or simply a chat with their friendly librarian. But on Tuesday, February 18, the South End library finally reopened its doors after a four-month stretch when the library’s interior was ‘refreshed’ with new flooring, fresh paint, additional outlets, reupholstered seating and new furniture. The festive occasion brought numerous elected and appointed city officials to the branch, as well as FOSEL board members and many library supporters who finally had a place to go for library services. “This may not seem like a long period of time for a library to be closed,” said BPL president, David Leonard, “but when you count on your library for computer access and story time, it is a long time indeed.”
Leonard spoke to the excited crowd assembled in the adult reading room and lauded the Friends of the South End Library (FOSEL for the public/private partnership they put together to begin the renovation process at the long-neglected branch library. The cost of the ‘refresh’ was about $190,000,” he said. FOSEL wrote a check for part of the refresh of $50,000 from a fundraising campaign that raised $100,000 in a few months during 2017-18. Chair of the BPL board of trustees, Bob Gallery, echoed his appreciation for FOSEL’s public/private partnership, the first time a Boston library Friends group collected funds for capital renovation of a branch library.
The contributions by you, our generous donors, allowed us to write a check for $50,000 for the new furnishings that will benefit all South End library users. Thank you.
Comfortable seating near the parkside windows
The library now features light-blue and easy-to-clean new floors imported from the Netherlands; an attractive palette of blues on its diagonal walls; a fresh coat of paint throughout the first and second floors, new upholstery; a reconfigured space to allow for a variety of seating arrangements; electrically wiring inside high and reading tables; an attractive seating area for teens underneath the stairs; new upholstery and rugs in the Children’s Room; new electrical outlets throughout the space; a ceiling-mounted projector and slide-down screen in the Community Room; and much-improved signage. And, to the relief of many parents and caregivers, each of the two restrooms now offers a changing station. The space reconfiguration and furniture choices were recommended by FOSEL board member, architect Michelle Laboy, during a multi-year planning process that was combined with the quick and successful fundraising effort by FOSEL in the fall of 2017.
A small but separate area for teens and tweens with floor lamps and outlets to recharge electronic devices; panels divide the space from the adult computer area and can be used as a white board
A row of adult computers is now separated from the teen and children’s space with colorful panels
The refreshed Children’s Space features new rugs and upholstery, and new computer tables (below)
The ‘refresh’ originally began as an effort by FOSEL to jumpstart a major renovation of the dilapidated branch, which was not scheduled for any improvements, et alone an expansion, until 2025 due to an enormous backlog of many other sub-standard library buildings in the 24-branch BPL system. The FOSEL proposal called for a multi-phased renovation that would combine public and private funds for a new South End facility. The Friends raised $100,000, of which $50,000 was added to a 2017 City budget allocation of $132,000 for the First Phase of the project. But happily, the Walsh Administration decided two years ago to completely renovate and expand the size of the South End library after all, beginning with a Programming Study in FY 2020. As a result, the First Phase face lift became a “refresh” to last for the next three to five years, while the multi-million-dollar ‘Big Reno’ is being planned in an upcoming process of community meetings, demographic fact-finding, and design studies that will start sometime this year.
Mayor Walsh’s Administration has made a major investment in the Boston Pubic Library system which, according to his South End spokesperson, Faisa Sharif, is a reflection of his dedication to making neighborhood public spaces accessible to all. Since he took office six years ago, more than $82 million was spent on the Central Library’s Johnson Building, now an attractive bustling hub that features a WGBH studio, the popular Newsfeed cafe, and a BPL Gift Shop. The almost $16 million renovation of the Central Library’s Rare Books and Manuscripts Department, to open to the public next year, will make it into an internationally recognized state-of-the-art facility of historical and art treasures. In addition, the BPL is in the process of looking for an architect to renovate the stately McKim building which adjoins the Johnson Building on Copley Plaza.
Among the BPL’s branch renovations, Jamaica Plain got a $10 million new facility a few years ago. The Adams Street branch, at $19 million, will be ready by 2021 and the $15 million Dudley Library renovation (perhaps Nubia library in the future?) is scheduled to reopen this spring. For the next five years, another $127 million is budgeted for several other library renovations, including the South End branch.
The current South end library improvements include a charming mural near the Children’s Room depicting a number of South End landmarks and cultural icons which FOSEL suggested the artist, Tony Capozzi, consider in his design, and he did. They include the BCA kiosk; Back Bay station; a row of bow-front brownstones; the Union United Methodist Church; a same-sex couple embracing; musical venues; planes flying over; and a number of cats, among other features. No dogs, regrettably. A similar mural is on he wall in the Chinatown branch, with its own iconic images.