Showing posts with label dlr LexIcon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dlr LexIcon. Show all posts

Monday, October 20, 2014

Dun Laoghaire library (DRL Lexicon) @ OHD. 
Posted on 
This is the biggest public building project undertaken in the DLR area for over a hundred years. The library, with its children’s reading and art rooms, meeting areas, café and a small theatre, all housed in one huge wedge shaped building, is perched on an extraordinary site.
I’m just a simple art historian- not an architectural critic at all- happy enough speaking about historic architecture from the medieval period up to about the 1950s, but badly out of my depth on contemporary architecture. So I won’t try. Far better anyway to let this amazing new building speak for itself.   Whatever about external consideration, this new library triumphs as a piece of architectural design.
Savour, and behold, the new DRL lexicon public library…
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Along with smaller more intimate reading,  study and meeting spaces,  in many parts of this building is a great sense of scale and of spectacle. 
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the entire landscape around the library has been reshaped and re-landscaped.  The hope is that this will provide a new route through the town and towards the seaside and the adjoining park.
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Senior architect for DLR, Bob Hannan, shows visitors around today.
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Obviously in public buildings, durability of materials is a key concern. It’s early days, but aesthetically at least the mix of warm timbers and concrete is highly successful. 
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I loved the see-through views and the reveals of different angles and views.
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In such a favoured location, framing the amazing views around the town and the coast was naturally a priority, while at the same time keeping enough space for the many thousands of books and for reading spaces.   Again, the architects seem to have got the balance right.  Here, below,  looking SE, towards Sandycove and the iconic 40 Foot
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Regular readers of this blog will already know of a general enthusiasm for maps.  No surprise then, even in a building full of wonderful details and materials, this map in poured, molded concrete, of DL harbo,r was a special pleasure today.
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Above;  a deeply, deeply unsuccessful attempt to use the panorama view on a smartphone, to capture the real panorama around DL harbour and some of the library itself. 
Below:  the library also houses within its huge interior,  a small theatre, with retractable, flexible seating (above, left) for 80-90 people.
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Below: there are also exhibition spaces.  Below, art by Wendy Judge, and below that, by Gary Coyle.
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Above, notes books, from artist Gary Coyle, documenting is daily swims in the nearby 40 Foot.
Below: this house below will be converted into craft studios and craft exhibition and retail space.  The house also has a symbolic importance.  It is fro this building that Marconi sent his first telegraph signals.  
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Below, the cafe, looking out onto the same lawn.
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Well done to  the design team at DRL and well done OHD for coordinating such amazing events together again this year.  

Monday, September 22, 2014

Essential or Extravagant? The New Dublin Libraries

2014 saw the (re)opening of two new libraries in Co. Dublin: Dún Laoghaire andBlackrock, two exciting but expensive projects that generated some controversy. Do we need more libraries built in the age of technology, with its ecological concerns about paper production and where Amazon sells more electronic than paper books? Well, it depends on what you mean by “library”.
The new Dún Laoghaire library, inaugurated on today’s Culture Night, the result of a €36m mammoth project and an outstanding example of ultra-modern Scandinavian-style architecture, is called a cultural centre and will comprise a café, gallery space, an auditorium, a crafts workshop and a children’s library. Once finished, it will open six days a week, with four late evenings. Rebranded the “DLR Lexicon”, it’s equipped with mobile computers and room space for meetings, events and activities to be used free by schools, book clubs, community groups, artists.
The new, refurbished Blackrock library opened on Bloomsday as part of a new complexhousing the original Town Hall and the new Blackrock Further Education Institute, a combined renovation/conservation project, where original features have been retained and restored. The library itself, open late two days a week, now has state-of-the-art IT facilities, a dedicated children’s section, and modern mezzanine study space plus separate reading room – a student’s dream.
When I visited these new buildings, the first thought that came to my mind was that they are the new Starbucks – a hilarious and ironic reversal of roles that somehow makes sense. They are places where you go to study, enjoy a little quiet time, flick through some magazines, work on your laptop, do research, join your friends for a bookish meet-up over gourmet coffee – free, modern, relaxing oases right in the middle of buzzy town centres and within walking distance from your home. The question is though, did we really need them and can we justify the costs of (re)building them?
Questions have been asked about the sustainability of traditional libraries for a long time. With the world at your fingertips thanks to online book archives and electronic bookreaders, who will actually use these buildings? Plenty of people, turns out. Students going to central Dublin colleges might appreciate not having to trek all the way into town to exchange their books. Older people enjoy the company of other readers and a free read of the day’s papers in a nice location not far from their home. And, finally: children. Most parents will have a bookcase brimming with books at home, but nothing compares to a visit at the library; seeing the expression on kids’ faces at the sheer volume of books and the impressive interiors where everybody is reading in silence is priceless. Even office workers could use their lunch break for a well-deserved literary breather over a nice cuppa – without the queues and white noise. See?  Starbucks!
Culture and literature are not material, but they need material investment, which is why I hope that these libraries will do well. And if you need a reminder as to why we need libraries, here is a short list of reasons:
-       They cost nothing (unless you’re late and they fine you): you don’t have to buy books you don’t like; you don’t have to buy books at all. They don’t discriminate: evenbroke geeks can afford the library.
-       They encourage reading: once you’re in, you have to read (most effective way to get children to read – fact). If you like a book, you tend to read more by the same author.
-       Great place to do your research. Librarians will help you find sources, get the books you want from another library and often point you in the right direction.
-       They’re about the only remaining places that offer free meeting space.
-       They have music, films and e-books, too.
-       They entertain your children with free activities and get them to read.
-       They are beautiful.
So Hurray! for the libraries, because without them, “we'd be dumb!”
Haven’t made plans for tonight yet? Our Culture Night musts will help.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

On Friday 12th September 2014 at 5pm 

Dún Laoghaire Library will close. 

The Library will re-open in dlr LexIcon later this year.



 Please use the services of any other dlr Libraries during the closed period to borrow and return items, or renew items online at www.dlrcoco.ie/library

Inside dlr LexIcon

Rick O'Shea, 2FM DJ has written about the dlr LexIcon, 




'I live in Dun Laoghaire so I was honoured to be asked did I fancy a scoot around the soon to be opened new public library on the seafront.
To be honest I’ve been gawking at the construction for many, many months walking by and it’s been the subject of controversy locally, much of which I think will evaporate once locals get their hands on what is a gob-smacking building.
As an amateur architecture nut I can safely say it is probably the most incredible indoor public civic space I’ve ever been to in Ireland and rivals anything I’ve ever seen in Europe. Acres of bookshelves, huge areas to sit and read or work, conference rooms for book groups, local businesses and community groups, a café on the ground floor, performance spaces, exhibition galleries, even as you can see further down, 24 hour automated book tellers.
All of this comes with a huge public outdoor open space that is designed to tie the seafront with the much neglected western part of George’s Street.
It is *stunning*. Click on any of the photos for a larger version.
When it opens it’ll be a world-class amenity for anyone who lives in Dublin to come, read, bring the kids, wander round, spend a few hours…
Some of it will be open for this weekend’s Mountains To Sea Festival, the rest soon. When it is, you’ll be gobsmacked'...http://www.rickoshea.ie/

Thursday, July 31, 2014

The Great Teddy Bear Library Sleepover is happening on 13th Sept @ 7 pm as part of ‪Mountains to Sea 2014


The real Winnie the Pooh and Christopher Robin, ca. 1927 

Thanks to History In Pictures for the image. 

The Great Teddy Bear Library Sleepover is happening on 13th Sept @ 7 pm as part of Mountains to Sea 2014

Would your Teddy or animal friend like to take part in our very special Library Sleepover? Drop her/him off at the Mountains to Sea festival tent in Dun Laoghaire and she/he will be escorted to the library for lots of sleepover fun with other bears. Follow your Teddy’s antics on our festival’s Facebook page here during the evening from 7pm until their bedtime at 8pm. Teddy bears or soft toys welcome (Their owners will be sleeping at home!)


Venue: dlr LexIcon
Register: Saturday September 13th between 2pm and 4pm at the festival desk at dlr LexIcon.*
Collect your bear: Sunday September 14th between 2pm and 4pm (at the festival desk)**
Age: all ages welcome
Free - no booking required
 *Please note, no new Teddy Bears can be accepted after this time
** Please collect your Teddy Bears on time or they will worry!