Hillsdale Library

{{short description|Library in Oregon}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2025}}

{{Infobox building

| name = Hillsdale Library

| native_name =

| native_name_lang =

| former_names =

| alternate_names =

| status =

| image = Hillsdale Library - Portland, Oregon.JPG

| image_alt =

| image_size =

| caption = Library exterior, 2011

| map_type = Portland

| map_alt =

| map_caption = Location in Portland, Oregon

| altitude =

| building_type =

| architectural_style =

| structural_system =

| cost =

| ren_cost =

| client =

| owner = Multnomah County Library

| current_tenants =

| landlord =

| location = Hillsdale

| address = 1515 Southwest Sunset Boulevard

| location_town = Portland, Oregon

| location_country = United States

| coordinates = {{coord|45|28|47|N|122|41|40|W|display=inline,title}}

| groundbreaking_date =

| start_date =

| completion_date =

| opened_date = May 22, 1957

| inauguration_date =

| renovation_date = March 8, 2004

| demolition_date =

| destruction_date =

| height =

| architectural =

| tip =

| antenna_spire =

| roof =

| top_floor =

| observatory =

| other_dimensions =

| floor_count =

| floor_area = {{convert|12000|ft2|m2}}

| seating_type =

| seating_capacity =

| elevator_count =

| architect =

| architecture_firm = Thomas Hacker and Associates

| structural_engineer = Degenkolb Engineers

| services_engineer =

| civil_engineer =

| other_designers =

| quantity_surveyor =

| main_contractor = James W. Fowler Co.

| awards =

| designations =

| ren_architect =

| ren_firm =

| ren_str_engineer =

| ren_serv_engineer =

| ren_civ_engineer =

| ren_oth_designers =

| ren_qty_surveyor =

| ren_awards =

| parking =

| website = [http://events.multcolib.org/venues/hillsdale-library Hillsdale Library]

| embedded =

| references =

}}

The Hillsdale Library is a branch of the Multnomah County Library, located in Hillsdale, Portland, Oregon.{{cite web|url=http://events.multcolib.org/venues/hillsdale-library|title=Hillsdale Library|accessdate=August 22, 2012|publisher=Multnomah County Library}} The branch offers the Multnomah County Library catalog of two million books, periodicals and other materials. The original library building at this location opened in 1957 and was replaced by a new building on the same site in 2004. The new library, a green building designed to minimize environmental impacts, has {{convert|12000|ft2|m2}} of floor space and a storage capacity of 75,000 volumes.{{cite web|title=Hillsdale Library History|publisher=Multnomah County Library|url=http://multcolib.org/agcy/hls-history.html|date=June 3, 2011|accessdate=November 2, 2012}}

History

In 1913, the Multnomah County Library opened a small deposit station in Southwest Portland. It held a collection of 30 to 50 books and was easier for nearby residents to get to than the main library downtown. Later in the same year, a South Portland sub-branch of the library, larger than the deposit station, opened at First and Hooker streets. This sub-branch was replaced in 1921 by a new building, at Second Avenue and Hooker Street, funded by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. After large highways were built through the neighborhood, the South Portland branch served a declining population, and its open days were reduced to three a week in 1940. At the same time, a reading room in Multnomah, another southwest Portland neighborhood, was enlarged to accommodate a growing population.

By 1957, as the populations in the southwest part of the city continued to grow, the sub-branch in Multnomah was closed and a Southwest Hills branch was opened in Hillsdale at 1515 Southwest Sunset Boulevard. Responding to petitions from the community, the library board agreed to change the branch name to Hillsdale Library in 1986. In 1988, voters approved bonds to improve neighborhood libraries, including the Hillsdale branch. After many public discussions, the Multnomah County Commission voted to build a new library on the site of the existing building.{{cite news|title=Hillsdale Library will go for LEED Silver|url=http://djcoregon.com/news/2002/05/14/hillsdale-library-will-go-for-leed-silver/|accessdate=6 November 2012|newspaper=The Daily Journal of Commerce|date=May 14, 2002}} Those discussions included a proposal to relocate the library into a mixed-use development.{{cite news|last=Baker|first=Linda|title=Commission nixes mixed-use library for Hillsdale|url=http://www.bizjournals.com/portland/stories/2000/12/04/focus5.html?page=all|accessdate=6 November 2012|newspaper=Portland Business Journal|date=December 3, 2000}} In March 2002, the old building was demolished.

Construction on the new structure began in 2002, and the new Modernist structure, built to reduce its environmental impact, opened in 2004.{{cite news

|title= At Last, Hillsdale Library Will Open Monday

|work=The Oregonian

|date=March 5, 2004

|author=Wade Nkrumah

}} It was the last of a string of renovations costing $34 million undertaken by the Multnomah County Library system in the early 2000s, which an Oregonian article called "the widest rollout of civic architecture since the creation of Portland's first citywide library system in the 1910s."{{cite news

|title=Architecture Review - Perfect Pitch

|work=Oregonian

|date=March 7, 2004

|author=Randy Gragg

}} The new $4.1 million building doubled the size of the library to {{convert|12000|ft2}} and added parking below. Initially, officials hoped to earn Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) silver status for the new library, but instead were able to gain gold status in 2004 after the structure was completed.{{cite news|author=DJC Staff|title=Hillsdale Branch Library project turns silver into gold|url=http://djcoregon.com/news/2004/12/20/hillsdale-branch-library-project-turns-silver-into-gold/|accessdate=6 November 2012|newspaper=The Daily Journal of Commerce|date=December 20, 2004}}{{cite news|author=DJC Staff|title=Hillsdale Branch Library: Good as gold|url=http://djcoregon.com/news/2005/02/01/hillsdale-branch-library-good-as-gold/|accessdate=6 November 2012|newspaper=The Daily Journal of Commerce|date=February 1, 2005}} Features of the new building include items such as a {{convert|20|ft|adj=on}} high ceiling in the reading room, a tubular steel roof,{{cite news|last=Carter|first=Dan|title=Artful steel skeleton signals new library|url=http://djcoregon.com/news/2002/11/21/artful-steel-skeleton-signals-new-library/|accessdate=6 November 2012|newspaper=The Daily Journal of Commerce|date=November 21, 2002}} and {{convert|10|ft2|adj=on}} skylights.{{cite news|title=Engineers create architectural features|url=http://djcoregon.com/news/2003/02/04/engineers-create-architectural-features/|accessdate=6 November 2012|newspaper=The Daily Journal of Commerce|date=February 4, 2003}}

Thomas Hacker and Associates were the Hillsdale Library's architects, along with all 16 of the other branches redesigned or renovated. James W. Fowler Co. was the general contractor on the new building. The Hillsdale Library has a capacity of 75,000 volumes and has {{convert|12000|ft2|m2}} of floor space.

See also

References

{{Reflist}}