WGBH Educational Foundation on behalf of the American Archive of Public 
Broadcasting (AAPB) is pleased to announce the start of development on a new 
management system for the AAPB, funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The 
AAPB, a collaboration between Boston public broadcaster WGBH and the Library of 
Congress, has been working to digitize and preserve more than 50,000 hours of 
broadcasts and previously inaccessible programs from public radio and public 
television’s more than 70-year legacy. The new system, built in compliance with 
the PBCore metadata schema, will improve the AAPB’s ability to acquire 
additional collections and manage the metadata for the 2.5 million records in 
the AAPB’s collection. The system will also provide participating public 
broadcasting stations and archives across the country a platform to search, 
manage, and access their own collections.


WGBH is teaming up with AVP and Indiana University Libraries to configure 
Avalon, an evolving and robust media delivery system created within the Samvera 
community, to the needs of the AAPB. The Samvera community is a group of over 
35 institutions working together to develop shared technical solutions for the 
management of digital content. To provide the most benefit to both the AAPB and 
the Samvera community, the team is using a strategy of building multiple 
components or modules that can be plugged into Hyrax, an application adopted 
widely by Samvera partners, like Avalon. Among the features the team plans to 
develop are reporting functionality and support for PBCore ingest, export, and 
data modeling.  In the spirit of open source development, the Archival 
Management System (AMS) is being developed in tandem with the next iteration of 
Avalon. As both projects progress, the AMS team will work in close 
collaboration and consultation with Avalon team members, comprised of Indiana 
University and Northwestern University staff. WGBH, Indiana University, and 
Northwestern University are partners in the Samvera community.


About WGBH

WGBH Boston is America’s preeminent public broadcaster and the largest producer 
of PBS content for TV and the Web, including Masterpiece, Antiques Roadshow, 
Frontline, Nova, American Experience, Arthur, and more than a dozen other 
prime-time, lifestyle, and children’s series. WGBH also is a leader in 
educational multimedia, including PBS LearningMedia, and a pioneer in 
technologies and services that make media accessible to the 36 million 
Americans who are deaf, hard of hearing, blind, or visually impaired. WGBH has 
been recognized with hundreds of honors: Emmys, Peabodys, duPont-Columbia 
Awards…even two Oscars. Find more information at 
www.wgbh.org<http://www.wgbh.org/>.


About the American Archive of Public Broadcasting

The American Archive of Public Broadcasting (AAPB) is a collaboration between 
the Library of Congress and the WGBH Educational Foundation to coordinate a 
national effort to preserve at-risk public media before its content is lost to 
posterity and provide a central web portal for access to the unique programming 
that public stations have aired over the past 70 years. To date, over 50,000 
hours of television and radio programming contributed by more than 100 public 
media organizations and archives across the United States have been digitized 
for long-term preservation and access. The entire collection is available on 
location at WGBH and the Library of Congress, and almost 25,000 programs are 
available online at americanarchive.org<http://americanarchive.org/>.


About AVP

Founded in 2006, AVP is a global consulting and software development firm 
focused on freeing organizations from the obstacles of information management 
and maximizing the usability of their data. AVP focuses on leveraging a deep 
understanding of technology, information, business, and people to advance the 
ways in which data is used for the benefit of individuals, organizations, and 
causes. Visit AVP at https://www.weareavp.com

<https://www.weareavp.com>

About Indiana University Libraries

Bloomington, Indiana is home to Indiana University Libraries, one of the 
nation’s largest public academic research libraries. Our collections, people, 
and spaces use knowledge to inspire great work.  IU Libraries partners with 
every academic department on campus. Materials are digital, visual, audio and 
print. Over 60,000 journals are offered electronically, and the libraries hold 
9.9 million print volumes in 450 languages, and 100,000 films in its Moving 
Image Archive. A long-time leader in digital library projects and open source 
software development, IU Libraries developed wide-ranging digital initiatives 
as early as the 1990’s and recently embarked on the ambitious university-wide 
Media Digitization and Preservation Initiative.


About The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation

Founded in 1969, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation endeavors to strengthen, 
promote, and, where necessary, defend the contributions of the humanities and 
the arts to human flourishing and to the well-being of diverse and democratic 
societies by supporting exemplary institutions of higher education and culture 
as they renew and provide access to an invaluable heritage of ambitious, 
path-breaking work. Additional information is available at 
mellon.org.<http://www.mellon.org/>

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