Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 08, 2014, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A13
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Literacy has rarely looked so seductive.
You can walk among the mountain
ridges of bookshelves, in brilliant
natural light from oversized windows
and clerestory ceiling windows that
permit additional light.
But it's also a library- as- gatheringplace.
" It goes against library tradition
where you're not allowed to talk and
drink and eat," said Ken Kuryliw,
director of library services.
You are allowed to do all those
things here. The Ubuntu Caf�, with delicious
coffee and pastries prepared by
owner/ baker Jana Badenhorst of South
Africa, greets visitors at the entrance.
There's a teen area off in the corner
of the 18,000- square- foot library
where you can expect some talking.
There's an electric fireplace built into
Tyndall stone hearth where people
gather to read the newspaper and have
coffee chats.
But there are also out- of- the- way
places that are inclined to be noisefree,
more by architectural design
than by Please Be Quiet signs. Plus,
there is a reading room: the Robert
Jefferson Heritage Room, in honour of
the namesake and his $ 50,000 donation.
Donators Jim and Betty Anne
Gaynor deflect any praise, crediting
the architects, contractors and volunteer
committees on the project.
Jim was born on a farm in Ireland
and didn't have access to a library.
He and a friend moved to Canada in
the 1950s for the adventure. " I fell in
love with Canada almost the day I got
here," he said. He met Betty Anne,
who was from Thunder Bay, Ont.
They ran Gaynor Foods, the largest
grocery around with 125 employees,
for 24 years, until 1999. The Gaynors
see the library as giving back to the
community, particularly to young
people. The couple also donated $ 1 million
to the local Selkirk foundation for
youth projects.
Others say Gaynor was smart to attach
deadlines to the library funding.
The community had been trying to get
a new library built since 2000, without
success. The deadlines got everyone
focused, including governments. " It
put the cat in with the pigeons," said
Jim. Money had to be in place by 2012
and the building completed in 2013.
The builders just made it.
But the library is also a unique
collaboration of three capital region
municipalities: Selkirk and the RMs of
St. Andrews and St. Clements. The two
RMs chipped in funds for a facility
that isn't even within their borders,
said Colleen Sklar, volunteer chairwoman
of the library. ( People in those
municipalities won't have to pay for
library cards. A non- resident library
card costs $ 55. In Winnipeg, nonresidents
paid $ 140 for a library card
last year.)
It's allowed the community to have a
real library " instead of a spot in a strip
mall with a few pocket books," said
Sklar, who is also executive director of
the Partnership of the Manitoba Capital
Region. " No one community could
have built this type of facility."
The three municipalities each put
up $ 350,000 and Selkirk put in another
$ 700,000 from the sale of the former
library building. The province put in
$ 1.6 million and $ 2 million came from
private donations.
It's as green as can be. Green features
include ceilings made from reclaimed
ash, carpeting from recycled
materials, reused shelving purchased
from McNally Robinson's closed Polo
Park location and reclaimed glass for
the quartz- composite counters. Three
acres of dry- wet prairie make up the
backyard that will have walking trails.
A dry- wet prairie is an area where the
land drains, so plants must withstand
both extreme wet and aridity.
The old Selkirk library was well
used, with traffic of about 100,000
visits per year. Based on the first
month of operations, 160,000 visits are
projected for the new one.
The library has a hoard of books; the
most unique titles outside Winnipeg.
The reason is library boss Kuryliw insisted
its book budget be doubled - it's
now $ 90,000 per year - before he
agreed to take over and leave his job
as the province's acting director of
library services.
The Selkirk library has 50,000
books, 14,000 e- books and 4,000 DVDs.
Its operating budget is about $ 600,000,
with $ 145,000 paid by Selkirk and
$ 100,000 from each of the two RMs.
The province will chip in about
$ 250,000.
bill. redekop@ freepress. mb. ca
love story
New Selkirk library a community effort
S ELKIRK - The first community library
of the Red River settlers was in
Lockport, just six kilometres south of
Selkirk, comprised of books donated
by Lord Selkirk.
The first public library outside
Winnipeg was also built here
thanks to Dale Carnegie, the American
motivational writer and philanthropist
of libraries. In 1909, Carnegie
paid the shot to build Selkirk's
library, as he did with three other
libraries in Manitoba ( all Winnipeg),
and 125 in Canada ( mostly Ontario), and 2,509
around the world.
So Selkirk has a thing for libraries. Little
wonder it has now opened the spectacular
$ 5.2- million Gaynor Family Regional Library.
Local philanthropists Jim and Betty Anne
Gaynor, former owners of Gaynor's Foods in
Selkirk, donated $ 1.5 million to its construction.
OPEN ROAD
BILL
REDEKOP
PHOTOS BY MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Evy Galashan, 2, shows a favourite book during a visit to the recently opened Gaynor Family Regional Library in Selkirk.
SCAN PAGE
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It's allowed the community to
have a real library ' instead of a
spot in a strip mall with a few
pocket books'
- Colleen Sklar, volunteer chairwoman of
the Gaynor Family Regional Library
SUPPLIED IMAGE
Jim and Betty Anne Gaynor donated $ 1.5
million to the $ 5.2- million cost of the
new library.
It's a
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