Moving forward: think, reflect, play...

This blog is a continuation of Stepping back, looking forward: A year to think, reflect and play... More than anything, my sabbatical leave taught me that I need to take the time *daily* to look forward...even in the midst of a hectic work schedule. And the library staff needs to do the same...think, reflect, play... Formerly Stepping back, looking forward

3/07/2007

Allan Hancock College and the Lompoc Center

It has been a long trip...away from home for 7 days visiting libraries along highways 99 and 101 and then a few in between. Last night I was road weary so I stopped in San Luis Obispo to spend the night. Coincidentally, my daughter had just gotten her acceptance that day to Cal Poly SLO so it was great to cruise the campus once more. After a late night e-Scrabble game with my brother in law (till 2 am!), I feel asleep only to wake about 9 am. I needed to get on the road so that I would miss the LA traffic rushhour. I wanted to stop at Allan Hancock College as well as Santa Barbara City College.

I arrived at Allan Hancock and took a tour of newly remodeled library. It is modern and brings in light and brightness. Nice comfortable furniture and a Circulation desk that also wraps around to the Reference Desk. Nancy Meddings, Librarian and Director of Learning Resources was just heading off to a meeting so Leslie Mosson was so gracious and gave me a great tour. The Library also backs up to the LRC which has an art gallery, writing center and open lab for tutorial services.

I asked about Kathy Headke who I had met at a memorial service for Mary Heussenstamm, a watercolor artist who has exhibited at so many of our libraries. (PCC has a permanent display collection of her works.) Leslie called her at the Lompoc campus and she encouraged me to drive down there to see their Lompc Center. since I am going with the wind these days, I headed to Lompoc. It is a beautiful drive down towards Vandenburg and the hills were a glorious green! I had a great tour of the library and the center and Kathy and I enjoyed lunch together. Since I was late in leaving, I decided to skip Santa Barbara since I could easily make that trip from LA another day. Great day! I loved the energy at Allan Hancock!

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3/05/2007

Foothill College and De Anza College

My visit with my daughter Mindy near SFSU is done, her cupboards are filled with items from Costco and I am heading south to see my friend Vickey Johnson who is the County Librarian from the College of San Mateo. We are going to visit another one of the new libraries there in Millbrae and then I head south toward 101 to visit Foothill College and then DeAnza.

---later...

It is amazing when you touch base with an old friend who has similar passions as you. You just pick up where you left off the last time you met. Vickey and I used to room together at the American Library Association conference and no one else would room with us since we were known for laughing and talking until 3 or 4 in the morning. It was great to hear of all the initiatives she is engaged in when serving these 11 communities.

The San Mateo County Library system serves "the cities of Atherton, Belmont, Brisbane, East Palo Alto, Foster City, Half Moon Bay, Millbrae, Pacifica, Portola Valley, San Carlos, and Woodside, as well as unincorporated areas of the County represented by the County of San Mateo."



Before we headed out to lunch, we visited the Millbrae Library. This is the second busiest library in the County, next to the very busy new Belmont Library, which I saw the last time I was in this area. Like the Belmont Library, this architect used the natural surroundings of the neighboring park to to capture brightness and light in the Library. The entrance rotunda's lighting fixtures reminded me of stylized pinecones. One feature that college libraries don't usually do is a self-serve reserve, where patrons walk up and claim their own reserved titles, according to a coded name and pin number. It works beautifully and is an idea college libraries might also adapt for holds and recalls. The only exception would be a textbook reserve where so many students are competing for the same item. I loved the children's room as well as the reading room in the back with comfortable furniture and ottomans...and a fireplace. Very inviting!

Around 2 pm, I headed south towards Foothill College. I called their Reference desk to see "who was home" and found out that Walter Scott, the Library coordinator was not in, but was lucky to find Karen Gillette who told me where to park and where the library was located. Once again, I found a campus unlike any other--not surprising on this college trek of mine. Their architecture is very distinctive and when I searched in Google, Wikipedia reported that it is new-Japanese architecture designed by Ernest Kump and landscape by Hideo Sasaki.


Karen gave me a quick overview of the remodel and then I was off exploring the library while she helped several students at the Reference Desk. There was much activity inthe library, even in the late afternoon, since the Student Center is under construction. After my walk though, I headed down the highway towards De Anza, which like Foothill College, has a top reputation in the state.

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It is amazing how accessible these colleges are to the major highways and De Anza is no exception. The Library is centrally located on the campus which, like Foothill, is under major construction. I finally found my way and entered the library and learning center. I had a difficult time discerning where the reference desk was and whether it was a place people could go for information or just online catalog spaces. It was late in the afternoon and the person sitting at the desk never looked up so I wandered away and through the library. Perhaps I was tired... but it seemed that this library was stuck in the 80s, needing to be brought up to date with brightness and light. In one of the offices, I found Lena Chang who told me that Judy Mowry, the interim dean was not on campus that day. I had spoken with her at the Council of Chief Librarians meeting so I made my quick tour and went on my way. My goal was to reach San Luis Obispo by 7:30 or so...

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Shift happens

Ray Giles, from the Community College League, sent me this link:
It is called "Shift happens"
http://www.glumbert.com/media/shift

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Sonoma State's Jean and Charles Schulz Information Center






This was quite a logistical feat...I was on the road as of Wednesday, Jeff flew to Sacramento on Thursday for a meeting at the Chancellor's Office, then he came south to Ripon near Modesto, and I headed to Sac for the Council of Chief Librarians' meeting on Friday. I then came back south and met Jeff and my sister-in-law on the highway 5...and we headed west to Oakland to pick up our daughter Amy at the Oakland airport. We had to squeeze in another college visit to Sonoma State so that she could evaluate her options. This is the first Cal State campus library I have visited that was not a cold "institutional structure", with an modern, imposing presence. With so many Cal State campuses serving so many students, I am always shocked at how uninviting their campus libraries are. I have visited Cal State LA, SAC State, Chico and Fullerton, and all of them are the same vintage, perhaps the same architect (?) and do not invite students in.

But this one, the Jean and Charles Schulz Information Center is beautiful and welcoming. It was hard to believe that it was built in 2000 as a multidimensional, multimedia library and learning center. It looks like it opened yesterday. For more photographs and to read about the 7.5 million in private funding for this library, go to: http://library.sonoma.edu/about/exteriorpics.html and http://library.sonoma.edu/about/interiorpics.html, and http://library.sonoma.edu/about/building.html

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