Tuesday, December 13, 2022

A wonderful library in Finland

Jim and I both love libraries and have visited many in our travels. Only the really famous ones are in the travel guidebooks but we find almost any library interesting. 


 

Oodi Library provides a radical and increasingly rare service: a free and egalitarian public space. Credit: Kuvio

Two steel arches span over 100 meters to create a fully enclosed, column-free public entrance space; the timber facade is clad with 33-millimeter-thick Finnish spruce planks. There are all manner of curious, Alice in Wonderland-esque places to sit — or indeed, lie down — while leafing through a book.

Among the vast number of amenities, what caught Johansen’s attention were the library’s 3D printers, laser cutters and equipment to digitally sculpt wood. But over time, he realized that there was a more radical and increasingly rare service that the library provides: a free and egalitarian public space.

“Students can sit and study and just hang out,” he explains. “Or you can have your kid walking around, playing around. I always spend time there with my daughter. It’s more of a cultural space. You don’t need to consume anything.”