Chicago Sun-Times

NEW LIBRARY AT HISTORIC CHA DEVELOPMEN­T

Altgeld site will double as ‘ community center’

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@suntimes.com Twitter: @fspielman

The cramped public library at one of the Chicago Housing Authority’s most historic developmen­ts will be replaced by a new library that doubles as a “community center,” thanks to an innovative partnershi­p that Mayor Rahm Emanuel hopes to duplicate.

The new library will be built on CHA- owned land along 130th Street, near Ellis Avenue, adjacent to the Far South Side’s Altgeld Gardens developmen­t. The CHA will pick up the $ 7 million tab for constructi­on. The city will operate and maintain the facility.

“To both the libraries and public housing, I want to congratula­te them — like our libraries and public schools over in Back of the Yards — [ for] thinking past the walls that used to divide department­s and agencies in the city and serving one community, one neighborho­od, one child in a comprehens­ive way,” Emanuel said Tuesday.

“That is a different approach. You’re gonna see more of it.”

CHA CEO Eugene Jones Jr. called the partnershi­p with the city the “first of many” to provide a constructi­ve alternativ­e for young people living in public housing.

“It gives them something to look forward to. When I get home from school, I can go to the library. I can research. I can do other types of things or meet my friends over there. We can sit and work on a re- port together. Also make music, look at designing things,” Jones said.

Library Commission­er Brian Bannon noted that the new library will be at least three times the size of the old one.

“There isn’t a meeting room. It’s really small in terms of avail- ability for collection. There’s a children’s program packed full of kids. But space is an issue. There aren’t study rooms. Just a lot of the programmin­g that we often provide in our branch libraries is limited here,” Bannon said.

The partnershi­p is patterned after the joint- venture between the Chicago Public Schools and the Chicago Public Library that put a new community library — open to the public — in Back of the Yards High School.

By pooling diminishin­g resources, CPS and City Hall were able to offer “teen- focused collection­s and digital learning amenities” and still operate a public library for all Back of the Yards residents, who had lost their storefront library to flooding.

Local Ald. Anthony Beale ( 9th) called the new library for Altgeld Gardens the latest in a series of triumphs for a housing developmen­t that was not part of the CHA’s original Plan for Transforma­tion. He had to fight to get Altgeld Gardens included.

“Here we are today $ 435 million later with a completely rehabbed facility. A few years ago, Carver was one of the worst high schools in the city of Chicago. We turned it into a military academy and from that day, I have not gotten one phone call about problems out at Carver Military,” Beale said.

“That’s a great testament [ to the fact] that, if we put money in education, we put money in housing, we create jobs, we can rebuild a community.”

 ?? | FRAN SPIELMAN/ SUN- TIMES ?? Mayor Rahm Emanuel reads to children at Altgeld Gardens, which is getting a much bigger library.
| FRAN SPIELMAN/ SUN- TIMES Mayor Rahm Emanuel reads to children at Altgeld Gardens, which is getting a much bigger library.

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