W Post
 
 
The digital age is forcing libraries to change. Here’s  what that looks 
like.
 
By _Andrea Peterson_ (http://wapo.st/15GaHsJ) , Published: August 7,  2013

 
 
 
 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-switch/files/2013/08/MLK-Digital-Commons-92-1.jpg)
  
The Digital Commons at the Martin Luther King Jr.  Memorial Library in 
Washington, D.C. (DC Public Library/The Freelon  Group)
You make a beeline from the door to the iPad mini. The touch interface is  
nice, but you want something a little larger so you move on to the next 
device.  Are you weighing a purchase at an Apple Store? No, you’re trying one 
of 
the  lineup of devices at the new Digital Commons space at the Martin 
Luther King Jr.  Memorial Library in Washington, D.C. 
The similarity to an Apple Store is no accident, according to Nicholas  
Kerelchuk, the manager of the Digital Commons. But at the Digital Commons you  
can try out e-book readers from all of the major manufacturers, including  
Kindles, Nooks, and Windows 8 tablets. 
And the e-book readers are just the start. When the Digital Commons opened 
in  July, it featured a 3-D printer with a smart panel design, on-demand 
book  binding machine, 80 desktops (some of them featuring pricey graphic 
design  suites), rows of tables set up for patrons bringing their own devices, 
a 
Skype  station, and a vast co-working space the library calls the “Dream Lab.
” Could  this sprawling space be a glimpse into the future of libraries? 
Libraries around the country are facing _budget  cuts_ 
(http://lj.libraryjournal.com/2013/06/funding/libraries-around-the-country-under-budget-pressure/
)  as local governments struggle with the aftermath of the recession – and  
in many cases that means fewer branches or services. But in the recession 
more  people than ever _relied_ 
(http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-18563_162-4770599.html)  on  libraries for frugal 
entertainment options and to search for 
employment  opportunities. 
However, at the same time, libraries are facing an identity crisis: As the  
Internet has become the primary way people gather information,  the 
traditional “building filled with books” model is less relevant to  their 
lives. 
As a result, “libraries are really transforming themselves into technology  
hubs” says Kathryn Zickuhr, a researcher focusing on how Americans use  
libraries at the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life  Project.
 
Pew’s _research_ 
(http://libraries.pewinternet.org/2013/01/22/library-services/)  shows that 
while many patrons still want to use  libraries to borrow 
books, they’re also increasingly thinking of them as a  community space that 
enables access to technology and a source of digital  literacy for all 
different demographics. 
George Williams, the Media Relations Manager for the D.C. Public Libraries  
system, certainly sees the Digital Commons as part of that shift: “one of 
the  great things about the space is it is come as you are. There is no 
prerequisite  that you must know 3-D printing or that you must know even 
computer 
basics.” 
Some of the computers in the Commons are set up to be one-on-one stations  
where library workers can assist patrons who are just learning the 
technology.  Zickuhr says this reflects a trend Pew is seeing in libraries 
across the 
 country: “They end up offering a lot of one-on-one assistance to patrons 
who  need to use a computer or e-mail for the first time, but don’t have the  
experience and may not have any other place they can go to get that.” 
Even outside of the Commons, digital services are a big part of what the  
library system provides. Williams says their digital library is “the busiest  
location outside of Martin Luther King Jr. Library.” While there are a 
variety  of things available, like free digital magazine subscriptions, remote 
e-book  rentals are one of their most popular with 50 percent annual growth “
at a  minimum” since they started provided the service. 
In some ways, the Commons is a physical space 18 months in the making that  
reflects the investments in digital resources the D.C. library system has 
made  in the last several years. “The idea of the Digital Commons,” Williams 
says, “is  not only bridging the digital divide in terms of what people say 
when they mean  about access to the internet, for us it’s access to tech 
and the skills they’re  going to need as tech continues to change the way that 
we interact, the way that  we work, and the way that we learn.” 
The 3-D printer is the “rock star” of the space in terms of  popularity. 
But more importantly, Kerelchuk says, “this is the future. Look  at the 
bio-medical field, look at the auto industry, they’re using 3-D  printing.” 
Kerelchuk also has a special place in his heart for the Dream Lab which he  
believes is “one of the first co-working places in a public libraries,” 
saying  that despite having the least amount of technology, it’s “probably 
the most  exciting thing in the room.” In exchange for using the space, 
entrepreneurs  agree to provide one hour of community programming per month. 
The 
Commons  received over 25 applications from groups wanting to use the space 
by July 30—  just three days after they started accepting applications. 
Williams thinks the Commons sets D.C. apart from other libraries in the  
country: “No space had something as large in scale and scope as we’ve done in 
 DC.” Kerelchuk agrees, arguing “everyone’s done a computer lab, people 
have done  a digital bar, people have done a maker space, in some cases they’
ve done a  style of co-working space with collaborative rooms [...] but no one
’s ever done  it all in one room.” 
More important than comparing the Digital Commons to other library  
modernization efforts, however, is how they are adapting to the needs of the  
District in the digital age: “we’re a very reactive agency, if the public asks  
for it we’re going to try to give it to them” says Kerelchuk. So when he 
says,  “we’re changing the community, we really are” it’s hard not to think “
and the  needs of the community are changing you.”

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to