Albuquerque Journal

LITTLE LIBRARIES ON THE HORIZON

City partners with Wisconsin-based organizati­on for initiative

- BY RUSSELL CONTRERAS

Planned small spaces will be expanded by volunteeer­s to create opportunit­y for residents to trade books.

The City of Albuquerqu­e and a Wisconsinb­ased group have agreed on a new initiative to encourage residents to build “Little Free Libraries” throughout the region as public libraries and bookstores remain under restrictio­ns due to the pandemic.

The Little Free Library nonprofit organizati­on announced this week that Albuquerqu­e will help volunteers create small spaces where residents can trade books.

Under the agreement, the city’s Office of Civic Engagement’s One ABQ Volunteers program will work to expand the number of free libraries across the city.

Albuquerqu­e currently has more than 60 Little Free Libraries, officials said.

The city’s public libraries recently reopened but during limited hours.

“We are honored to engage with the city in this way, and we are excited to see how the landscape of this community changes with a focused effort around building community and creating greater book access,” Little Free Library Director of Programs Shelby King said. “One book-sharing box at a time — that’s all it takes to have an impact.”

Across the United States, volunteers are reporting a jump in little free libraries as readers look to pass the time. Made of wood or brick, and placed in front of parks or in the trunk of a car, the libraries have seen their small spaces overwhelme­d with books because of the novel coronaviru­s.

Since 2009, tens of thousands of little free libraries have sprung up in the U.S. and more than 100 countries. They operate by donations and volunteers. In rural areas, where broadband internet is sparse, the little free libraries may be the only place to find a James Baldwin novel.

In March, the Hudson, Wisconsin-based Little Free Library nonprofit group unveiled its 100,000th book-sharing box — donated to the Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Mexican Americans in a historic Latino neighborho­od in Houston.

Albuquerqu­e first lady Elizabeth Kistin Keller said the city is excited to work on a project that expands little free libraries.

“For years, we’ve been fortunate to have community members build their own Little Free Libraries,” she said. “Over the last few months, in particular, we’ve seen how they can maintain a love of reading in kids when schools and libraries are closed and serve as a powerful way for communitie­s to connect and share with each other from a distance during the coronaviru­s pandemic.”

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 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? A boy takes out a book from the Little Free Library at a Park in the Northeast Heights in 2014. Across the United States, volunteers are reporting a jump in usage of the tiny popups.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL A boy takes out a book from the Little Free Library at a Park in the Northeast Heights in 2014. Across the United States, volunteers are reporting a jump in usage of the tiny popups.
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