Vancouver Sun

SO MUCH MORE THAN BOOKS

Reclaiming two floors of building allows for city views, a mini-theatre and more

- KEVIN GRIFFIN kevingriff­in@postmedia.com

Renovation­s at the Central Library on West Georgia have created a rooftop garden, new community gathering spaces, rentable meeting rooms with garden and city views, a reading room, exhibition spaces, an 80-seat theatre and outdoor terraces.

By Saturday, Vancouveri­tes will have a new public space downtown in the Central Library on West Georgia.

The library opens the newly renovated top two floors, which now includes a rooftop garden.

In the original design competitio­n for the library building, architect Moshe Safdie imagined either a major public or private garden on the roof. But that never materializ­ed, and the area became what was essentiall­y a grassy green roof closed to the public.

For more than two decades after the library opened in May 1995, the two floors were leased by the provincial government as office space, with the expectatio­n that the space would one day be needed by the library. Once the lease ended, the library started planning to open up the eighth and ninth floors and add 42,000 square feet of new public space at a cost of $16.8 million. The rooftop garden was designed by landscape architect Cornelia Hahn Oberlander.

Christina de Castell, who became chief librarian in June, said the rooftop garden and added public space mark a new phase for the Vancouver Public Library.

“It has been a dream that many of us have had to be able to finally welcome the public to this rooftop garden,” de Castell said. “People will have a whole new experience of the space and an incredible new view of the Vancouver skyline.”

The two new floors add needed public community space downtown, she said.

“We see a real need for people to find places to connect with community and their history in free public spaces.”

At a media preview Wednesday morning, numerous constructi­on workers were putting the finishing touches to the two floors, including pouring sand-based grout between the grey granite and dark basalt tiles in the outdoor garden.

If you are seated on the movable patio-style chairs, you will be able to see the white retractabl­e roof on B.C. Place and the numerous satellite dishes on the CBC building.

Seating is also provided by deepbrown ipé (pronounced ‘ee-pay’) wooden benches. Also known as Brazilian walnut, ipé wood is con- sidered hard, strong and resistant to rot. Plants in the garden include Arbutus hedge, white roses and lavender. By next summer, honeysuckl­e on the roof is expected to grow and cascade onto a trellis to create a canopy of green over the garden entrance.

There are several other amenities in the eighth and ninth floors, including a light-filled Yosef Wosk Poet’s Corner, a skylight covered with a light-sensitive film that changes in response to lighting conditions, and a honey-maple wooden staircase that links the two floors.

The renovation has added an 80-person theatre and meeting spaces able to accommodat­e groups of 10 to 90 people.

Including the top two floors, the Central Library now has 370,000 sq. ft of space.

Also opening Saturday is “morph,” the first exhibition in a new gallery space. Using a word that references the city’s animation industry, the exhibition is designed to look at the storytelli­ng impulse as well as different stories about what Vancouver means.

The Central Library expansion opening ceremony is from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. on Saturday. It is open to the public. The Central Library is at 350 West Georgia St.

 ?? ARLEN REDEKOP ??
ARLEN REDEKOP
 ?? ARLEN REDEKOP ?? The Central Library has completed a $16.8-million renovation of the West Georgia building’s eighth and ninth floors. The extra 42,000 square feet of space includes a skylight that adjusts to lighting conditions.
ARLEN REDEKOP The Central Library has completed a $16.8-million renovation of the West Georgia building’s eighth and ninth floors. The extra 42,000 square feet of space includes a skylight that adjusts to lighting conditions.

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