Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library

The Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library (MLKML) is the central facility of the District of Columbia Public Library (DCPL), it was constructed and named in honor of the American civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. It is located in the 901 G St. NW in Downtown Washington, D.C., with its main entrance between 9th and 10th St. in the opposite corner of Gallery Place station, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum. The library is located in and around the Chinatown, Mount Vernon Square, and Penn Quarter neighborhoods.[1]

Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library
38°53′55″N 77°1′29″W
Location901 G St. NW
Washington, D.C., United States
TypePublic library
Established1972
Architect(s)Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Mecanoo Edit this on Wikidata
Branch ofDistrict of Columbia Public Library
Collection
Size1,334,479 volume Edit this on Wikidata
Other information
Websitedclibrary.org/mlk

History

The city's previous central library, in Mount Vernon Square, was donated by industrialist Andrew Carnegie and dedicated in 1903.

City leaders started to identify the need for a new central library by at least 1961. A Booz Allen Hamilton report sponsored by the city government and issued that year found that the library was inadequate in size and technology, located in the city's "worst slum" and that "At any hour of the day or night, a collection of derelicts loaf around the Library and sleep on the curved bench in front." It called for a new library downtown at an estimated cost of $12 million.[2]

Construction

Architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe designed the 400,000 square foot (37,000 m2) steel, brick, and glass structure, and it is an example of modern architecture in Washington, D.C. This library was Mies's only public library, and his only building constructed in Washington, D.C.

The building was completed in 1972 at a cost of $18 million. By the early 2000s, years of deferred facility maintenance were widely apparent.[3]

On June 28, 2007, the District of Columbia’s Historic Preservation Review Board designated this building a historic landmark. The designation, which applies to the exterior as well as interior spaces, seeks to preserve Mies' original design while allowing the library necessary flexibility to operate as a contemporary library facility. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007.[4]

Performers in front of the library's entrance as part of the 2009 Music Al Fresco Series

The building's lobby includes a large mural of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. created by artist Don Miller.

Renovation

Mecanoo architecture firm was elected to renovate the library, the renovation process started on March 4, 2017, the building underwent a $211 million renovation, the library reopened in 2020 after 3.5 years of renovations.[5][6] The entire interior was completely redone and included a new auditorium, dance studio, recording studios, tool library, offices, and a rooftop garden.[7][8][9]

Covid-19

After the renovation, the library reopened its doors with limited services, and closed its doors again following a phased management of the pandemic, it has been a center for COVID-19 testings and distributions of masks as a contribution in the city's efforts against COVID-19 propagation,[10][11][12] while at the same time served the patrons needs.

Accessibility

The library follows Accessibility regulations in accordance with Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA):

  • Doors and elevators Wheelchair accessible in every floor.
  • One Topaz HD magnifier that allow users with impaired vision to read documents with small fonts in the font size most convenient from them, it includes a brightness dial, a magnification dial, a color dial, its ergonomic design allows choose the screen's height and orientation, while the tray allows the smooth movement of the texts, the lock button can be used to read, hold or write documents.[13][14]
  • ADA computers for persons with visual impairment or physical disabilities.
  • Four wide elevators for patrons and more elevators for staff use.
  • One restrooms for each gender in 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th floors and two family restrooms with baby changing stations located in the 5th floor.
  • Air conditioning to cool the library in summer and heat pumps to warm it in winter, and ventilation on every floor.
  • Proper lightning for reading.[15]
  • 2 set of stairs are located in the front of the building and 2 more set of stairs are located in the back of the building that can also be used in case of fire or outages.

Collections

The Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library houses several of the library system's special collections.

First floor: New books, DVDs and Audiobook s

On the first floor can be borrowed new books, movies, television series and audio books.

Second floor: Children collection, teen collection and Center for Accessibility

The second floor contains three main sections and also study rooms:

  • Children collection: Contains books for early readers, also DVD movies, audio book and other materials that can be used at the place or borrowed by the patrons. it includes an exit to the wooden slide for children that allows them to slide down to the first floor and entrance.
  • Alma Thomas Teen Space: Is a space for study and work, it counts with armchairs, chairs and tables, books, graphic novels and four computers where teenagers can do their works. It was named after African-American artist Alma Thomas,
  • The Center for Accessibility: It is located in the west section, room 215 has Braille magazines and specialists in adaptive technologies to assist disabled people.[16]

Third floor: Reading rooms

It counts with to main reading rooms, and study rooms and collaborative spaces in between the main reading rooms.

The East book reading room with magazines and other materials.

The Grand reading rooms (west reading room), it holds a collection of books for adults and tables and chairs for independent or collaborative reading or work.

Fourth floor: History collection and Special collections and exhibitions

The Washingtoniana collection includes books, newspaper archives, maps, census records, and oral histories related to the city's history with 1.3 million photographs from the Washington Star newspaper and the theatrical video collections of the Washington Area Performing Arts Video Archive.[17]

The Black Studies Center was established along with the MLK Library in 1972 to collect documents related to the African diaspora focusing on African American culture.[17]

Special exhibits

In the summer of 2023, the library showed 12 original drawings from Leonardo da Vinci in a free exhibit entitled Imagining the future - Leonardo da Vinci: In the mind of an Italian genius. The drawings were originally made in the 1400s and 1500s. The exhibit ended on August 20, 2023.

Services

Computers

The library count with 31 computers with internet access and office applications that can be used for 70 minutes that could be renewed indefinitely if no other patron is on wait list for the same terminal, and 8 guest terminals that can be used temporarily for up to 15 minutes.

Meeting and study rooms

Meeting and study rooms can be reserved at any information desk at the day of use and also can be reserved in advance online. The maxiumum hours of use for a study room is 3 hours, two times a day. Staff will open the room with a key and if the user exit the room should ask information desk to reopen the room. The light controls of the rooms include three buttons, one that turns the light on, one that turns the light off and one that regulates the intensity of the light, some of the study rooms include projector and a screen or a monitor where a laptop can be connected through an HDMI cable and can also receive signal from cloud software that enables the display of content throughout WiFi or Ethernet networks, these allow patrons to use a bigger screen for their study or conference sessions. Other available spaces could be rented: the Auditorium, Circulation Space, Event Space, Great Hall, Great Hall East, Great Hall Informal Performance, Great Hall West.[18]

On floor one could be reserved meeting rooms 105-B to 105-E Meeting Rooms (with 2-6 Person Capacity)

On 2nd floors could be reserved meeting rooms 201-I to 201-L and Accessibility Program Rooms 205-A and 205-B.

On 3rd floor could be reserved meeting and study rooms: 302-A to 302-L.

4th floor: Conference rooms on 4th floor, rooms 401-A to 401 G and at the Local History Center (The People's Archive): 405 Tables 1 to 12.

Center for Accessibility

Room 215 has Center for Accessibility
Room 215 has Center for Accessibility

The Center for Accessibility provides customers with disabilities equal access to library resources and services:

Braille magazines at DC public library.jpeg
Braille magazines in room 215

Hotspot

The library offers free Wi-Fi accessible by personal computers and cellphones that support Wi-Fi connectivity.

Printers and scanners

The library include 2 printers and offer library patrons 20 free color or black pages, and also include scanning services.

Online services and mobile applications

The library offer an online catalog of it materials,[21]

Mobile phone charging stations

The library include 6 charging station for mobile phones and other equipment on second floor and 6 charging stations on the third floor, each one with a USB port and wall connectors, the stations do not include USB charging cable, therefore patrons should bring their own USB cable. Wall and floor power connectors are also available to charge laptops and other personal equipment in reading rooms and working tables. Mobile phones can also be charged on the computers USB ports while the patron are working on them.

Self-checkout Kiosks

Four self-checkout Kiosks that allow patrons to borrow materials are located on the first floor.

Income tax help

The Library host income tax return preparation for qualified residents.[22]

Passport acceptance center

The library staff explains patrons how to Apply for a NEW Passport and how to renew a passport.[23]

The Auditorium

The Auditorium is located in Floor five, it is a 291-person state-of-the art theater in the city's flagship library has hosted live performances, lectures, and film screenings, including performances by the National Museum of the United States Navy's band[24] and Wolf Trap Opera's world premiere of BORN FREE by Edward W. Hardy.[25][26][27][28]

The DC Public Library Foundation (DCPLF) received a $2.7 million donation from Jeff Bezos to support Beyond the Book, the extension of Books From Birth; one of the DC Public Library's most important and beloved literacy programs for young children. Bezos’ donation is the largest ever received by the foundation in its 35-year history.[29] As a means to recognize Bezos's $2.7 million donation, DCPL Director Richard Reyes-Gavilan recommended naming the auditorium after him.[30] This received criticism from council members such as Charles Allen, and D.C.’s shadow representative to Congress Oye Owolewa.[31]

Marianne's Cafe

Mariannes cafe is located on the first floor, it offers coffee, bread and other meals. The cafe occasionally offer catering in collaboration with Chef José Andrés’ ThinkFoodGroup. It is run by DC Central Kitchen and is named after American chef Marianne Ali.[32][33]

Drinking fountain

Many drinking fountains are located in every floor of the library.

Restrooms

Library public restrooms are located all the building floors except the first floors, they include gendered restrooms and family restrooms.

Terrace and garden

The terrace and gardens are located in the fifth floor, they surround the Auditorium. It includes a garden with a view of a section of Chinatown and G, H and 9th St at open air, it includes an outdoor space under a roof with tables and chairs to be used by the public where patrons can work and enjoy the fresh air and the surrounding environment without interruptions or having to go indoors when rains or snows. It is located over the roof of fourth floor.[34][35][36]

The Labs (Level A)

The laboratories or labs is another space where patrons ex-change their traditional role of the consumers and instead can become the creators of their works. The Labs are currently located under the first floor, in the level A of the library and they are accessible from the 2 frontal elevators and also through the stairs.

In July 2013 the DC Public Library opened the Digital Commons area on the second floor, it included a 3-D printer, an Espresso Book Machine, computers, and a "Dream Lab" composed of meeting spaces and cubicles with devices for collaborative work, it was created to attract startup companies and community organizations without permanent offices to use wireless Internet, DVD players, projectors, and Smart Boards.[37] During the renovation the Digital Commons was renamed to the Labs and were moved to the Level A of the library. The lab count with the following services:

  • Twelve computers restricted for design and audiovisual production applications that include adobe creative suite and Cura, among others.
  • A studio lab for video edition, podcast and blogging.[38]
  • A editing room where patrons can create their projects and also design their 3D objects with the Tinkercad, sketchup, openscad and blender, and also Cura software to print their work.

Studio Lab

The studio lab offer patrons a 30-minute safety orientation, after which one they could reserve an available session in any of the labs where they should take an equipment certification and safety classes during their first session in each Lab. The studio lab offer the following services:

  • Audio Recording Studio (3 hour sessions)
  • Band, Green Screen, Photography or Voice Practice Studio (2 hour Sessions)
  • Dance Studio Session (3 hours sessions with up to 2 per month).[39]
  • Universal Laser Systems
  • Sewing Machines, among other labs.

DIY Memory Lab

  • A DIY Memory Lab Transfer Session, it is received In-person. This memory lab that teach patrons how to digitalize or preserve their recorded memories.[40][41]

Fab Labs

Ultramaker 3

The fabrication labs or Fab Labs is another space in the Labs where patrons can create their own works. The process of use the Fab Labs requires a free membership for patrons 13 years or older. It can take more than one day to use a machine in case that there is not available spots, therefore is recommended to reserve online the classes and machines before their visit to review if there are laboratories available, patrons also can walk-in and ask if there is any session that got cancelled and use a laboratory for the remaining of the session time.

3D printing: The labs count with four Ultramaker 3 3D printers that allow patrons to print their own designed 3D objects. The process for the printing of patrons first object could take more than one day since it requires take the 3D printing class and also the introduction to the printer, and safety course before they are patron are allowed to reserve a printer time that can last up to 2 hours. Users should bring their own USB memory or hard drive, since the objects should be loaded or saved in the a USB memory from which the objects will be transferred to the 3D printers.[42][43] The software used is Cura, the file type used is stereolithography or .slt. The cost of printing is 5 cents per gram of 3D objects designed, resulting in objects with a price on the range of 5 cents to 20 dollars, depending on the size of the object.

Clubs

MLKML holds many official club meetings that are announced in tis website as part of patron services, some of them are the following:

  • MLK Chess Club: A club for chess players of all ages and skill levels that have meetings the second Saturday of every month between 2:00 P.M. and 3:30 P.M. on room 401E[44][45]
  • Board Game Club: An after school board game club for children's.[46]
  • Anime Manga Club: A club for anime fans for discussions, activities and trailer screenings that meets the second and fourth Saturday of each month between 2:00 P.M. and 5:00 P.M. on room 401.[47]

Landmark designations

In June 2007, the DC Historic Preservation Review Board (HPRB), designated the building exterior, enclosure, and the interior public spaces on the ground floor as historic landmark, it is in the DC Inventory of Historic Sites. In the same year, it was listed in the National Register of Historic Places.[48]

See also

References

  1. Let's Go Washington, D.C. 13th Edition, page 73
  2. Clopton, Willard (August 30, 1961). "$12 Million Main Public Library is Proposed for Heart of Downtown". The Washington Post.
  3. Weiss, Eric M. (March 16, 2006). "Outdated Eyesore or Modern Masterpiece?". The Washington Post. p. DZ01.
  4. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  5. "D.C.'s ambitious, stunning new MLK Library". Washington Post. 5 October 2020.
  6. "Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library Modernization". 2 March 2020.
  7. "MLK Library will reopen in September, giving D.C. a renewed central hub". Washington Post. 17 July 2020.
  8. "MLK Library Architect Selection Process". 7 July 2016.
  9. "Grand Reopening of the MLK Library | Family Festival". 16 September 2021.
  10. "MLK Library's grand reopening draws festive crowd". 25 September 2021.
  11. "Test Yourself | coronavirus".
  12. "Covid-19".
  13. "List of Adaptive Technologies". 15 February 2019.
  14. "Freedom Scientific Topaz vs. Humanware Prodigi | Low Vision Video Magnifiers". YouTube.
  15. Kennicott, Philip (2020-07-15). "America's libraries are essential now — and this beautifully renovated one in Washington gives us hope". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 2023-03-30.
  16. Center for Accessibility at official library site
  17. "Special Collections". D.C. Public Library. Retrieved 2009-12-14.
  18. "Meeting and Study Rooms". 4 January 2016.
  19. "Accessible Board and Card Game Night".
  20. "Braille Class".
  21. "DCPL".
  22. "Income Tax Assistance".
  23. "DC Public Library Passport Acceptance Office". 27 October 2015.
  24. "Veterans Day Concert with the U.S. Navy Band". DC Public Library Event.
  25. Cristi, A. A. (May 20, 2022). "Wolf Trap Opera Announces World Premiere Of Edward W. Hardy's BORN FREE". BroadwayWorld.com.
  26. "Lineage: Poems of Margaret Walker | Wolf Trap". www.wolftrap.org.
  27. "Edward W. Hardy". Austin Chamber Music Center.
  28. "Lineage: Poems of Margaret Walker | Live Music Project". www.livemusicproject.org.
  29. Austermuhle, Martin (January 28, 2022). "D.C. Public Library Trustees Vote To Name Auditorium After Jeff Bezos". DCist.
  30. Austermuhle, Martin (January 31, 2022). "D.C. Public Library trustees vote to name auditorium in MLK Library after Jeff Bezos". NPR.org.
  31. Public Library, D.C. (20 December 2021). "DC Public Library Foundation Receives Donation From Jeff Bezos". District of Columbia Public Library.
  32. "DC Central Kitchen to run modernized Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library's cafe and catering operations". 9 November 2020.
  33. "Marianne's by DC Central Kitchen".
  34. "5 Reasons to Visit the Newly Renovated Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library in Washington, D.C." 10 January 2022.
  35. "Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library | Washington DC".
  36. "PHOTOS: Look Inside the MLK Library's $211 Million Renovation - Washingtonian". Washingtonian - the Website That Washington Lives by. 4 August 2020.
  37. "D.C. Library Digital Commons Opens with 3-D Printing, Book Pressing, and Lots of Computers: DCist". Archived from the original on 2013-09-18. Retrieved 2014-01-26. DCist Article, retrieved July 17, 2013
  38. "Studio Lab". 24 October 2018.
  39. "Fabrication Lab". 2 August 2019.
  40. "The Memory Lab". 7 January 2016.
  41. "The Labs at DC Public Library -- Studio Lab". YouTube.
  42. "Fabrication Lab". 2 August 2019.
  43. "The Labs at DC Public Library". 24 October 2018.
  44. "MLK Chess Club".
  45. "Chess Club".
  46. "Board Game Club".
  47. "Anime Manga Club".
  48. https://www.ncpc.gov/docs/7610_Concept_Alternatives_Book_Oct2014.pdf
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