outside-render-vid-bg.jpg

Charting a New Course

The New Sawyer Free Library Gloucester MA

 

Being literate today is about being able to navigate, evaluate and communicate in the modern world.

The 21st century learning environment requires a public library that has the space and technology resources to deliver on these needs. Together, digital access, self-directed learning, exploration and community engagement will be an anchoring function of the Sawyer Free Library 2025 renovation and expansion.

Flip to compare with the current space.
Main Stairs & Atrium
Old Main Floor
Lower Lobby
Basement Entryway
Main Reading Room
Old Main Reading Room
Front Entrance
Old Front Entrance

Schematic design renderings; Subject to change.

Sawyer Free 2025 will fully renovate the 1976 wing and double the library’s size with a 15,000 square-foot addition. New features will include build-outs like a digital makerspace, a dedicated teen room, a film production and editing suite, an audio recording studio and a 110-seat community room with state-of-the-science tech. Additional features will include a Gloucester history center and a quiet reading room along with fully ADA/OSHA and state/local building-code compliance. 

SFL Through the Years

Our plan is about respecting our history and modernizing our building with technological advancements that deliver new methods of learning and new ways of sharing ideas and information. It constitutes a once-in-a-lifetime, transformational investment in a vital community resource that will exponentially amplify the library’s ability to deliver critical services and outcomes not only for Gloucester, but to communities across Cape Ann as an epicenter of connection, creation, compassion, renewal and advancement.

“I think a renovated and new Sawyer Free Library would mean a tremendous amount to this community—it’s an investment in the people who live here.”
Oliver Barker
Cape Ann Museum Director

The project will constitute an exemplar of what a 21st century community space can and should be in terms of architecture, sustainability, use of natural resources and light, wayfinding, layouts, lines of sight, air quality and public safety. Sawyer Free Library already has a broader reach than any other single organization in our community. The library annually hosts scores of community lectures, forums, cultural events, exhibitions and presentations. It circulated more than 150,000 items in FY ’21 including almost 25,000 ebooks, downloadable audiobooks and music. With a modernized facility, the library would be capable of lending much more.

The 2025 library facilities will serve a broader, more diverse segment of our community. It will drive a 25-percent increase in annual visitors (both virtual and in person), a 25-percent increase in the number of public programs offered each month and a 50-percent increase in the number of programs hosted at the library by partner agencies.

SFL 2025: What's Coming

  • All across the country, libraries are leading from the front with regard to improving energy efficiency and combating climate change. As part of Sawyer Free 2025, both the new and renovated buildings will be a LEED Gold Certified, Net-Zero-Ready building—a status achieved by minimizing energy demand, generating as much electricity on site as possible, primarily via solar, and securing a 100-percent renewable source for additional electricity to achieve net-zero emissions.

  • The current library building presents severe limitations of space, navigation and mobility-device access. There are no bathrooms on the first or second floor; no restrooms are fully ADA compliant. The floor plan presents glaring public-safety concerns, including poor sightlines on the children’s floor and outside adult bathrooms, in addition to stairwells that are concealed behind closed doors. The front entrance, stack widths and elevator are not ADA compliant

    Restricted or burdensome access to physical environments is a barrier that prevents many people from fully exercising their right to participate in social, cultural and professional life on an equitable basis. The Sawyer Free Library 2025 building plan anticipates the diverse needs of people of different ages and abilities and exceeds accommodations required for ADA compliance. The design principles facilitate dignified, equal and intuitive use by everyone via multiple sensory formats. The library is committed to creating a building that will set new accessibility standards for public buildings in Gloucester.

  • New features will include build-outs like: a Children’s Programming Room (in addition to a Children’s Room), a Digital Makerspace, a dedicated Teen Room, a dedicated Teen-creation Room, a Film Recording Room, an Audio Recording Studio and a 110-seat Community Room with state-of-the-science tech, which will be open to reservation by members of the public.

    Additional features will include: a new atrium entrance, a Library History Center with an atmospherically controlled archival space, a Quiet Reading Room, a 16-seat reservable Community Conference Room and a renovation of the existing Matz Gallery along with fully ADA/OSHA and state/local building-code compliance.

  • Being literate today is about being able to navigate, evaluate and communicate in the modern world. The 21st century learning environment requires a public library that has the space and technology resources to deliver on these needs. Together, digital access, self-directed learning, exploration and community engagement will be an anchoring function of the Sawyer Free Library 2025 renovation and expansion.

    The project’s design principles are grounded in the human experience and a mission to put people first. The newly renovated and expanded Gloucester Lyceum and Sawyer Free Library will stand as an exemplar of what a 21st century educational, cultural, civic and community hub can and should be in terms of architecture, accessibility, sustainability, the use of natural resources and light, layouts, lines of sight, air quality and public safety. The interior will comprise three, seamlessly navigable floors featuring multimodal wayfinding, state-of-the-science embedded technology and customized acoustical elements.

  • Today, the Sawyer Free Library is one of the most visited public buildings in Gloucester. It is a welcoming, safe place where people of all backgrounds and ages feel valued and included in our community.

    The new library will feature new and emerging technologies along with a digital lab for media creation and coding activities. The 2025 Sawyer Free Library plan realizes our vision by respecting our history and modernizing our building for technological advancements, new methods of learning, and new ways of sharing ideas and information. It is a vision that fosters the values of place, belonging and connection in the Gloucester community.

    Over half of children in our schools qualify for free or reduced cost lunch, nine percent of families live below the poverty line and the city’s median household income is $72,574, well below the state median of $81,215. Wealth is pooled disproportionately in our oceanfront neighborhoods. The library’s location downtown within a low-income census tract along with growing immigrant populations and centrally located for all residents, offers the institution an optimal place to support the city’s well-being.

    Gloucester is experiencing a significant change and the library is vital in the transition. As the fishing industry evolves, Gloucester has become a growing biotechnology and tourism hub to boost our economy and attract visitors and residents. Gloucester needs to retain its talented young adults and future workers, attract businesses that will strengthen the economy, foster community connectedness and support families who will build a life here. Strengthening the library—a community hub located in the literal and symbolic heart of the city—is a cause worth all our attention.

  • The library maintains programming partnerships with more than 100 North Shore nonprofit and civil service providers, including Wellspring, Pathways for Children, The Open Door, The Cape Ann Museum, the Cape Ann YMCA and the City of Gloucester, among many others.

    The completion of the campaign will result in a 25-percent increase in annual visitors, a 25-percent increase in the number of public programs offered each month and a 50-percent increase in the number of programs hosted at the library by partner agencies.

 Why This Moment?

The Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners (MBLC) has awarded a provisional construction grant of $9.3 million to the Sawyer Free Library 2025 project, but only if sufficient community support is demonstrated first.

Gloucester is a very self-sufficient place. We all take pride in solving community problems on our own and being resourceful and getting a lot out of limited resources. We’ve been living with this library for a long time. With creativity, ingenuity and sweat equity, we’ve tapped into every dimension of its serviceability. But we deserve the same kind of resources that many communities enjoy from their public library. 

Beneath the extraordinary and wide-ranging services, programming and community benefits that the current library delivers, there is a decaying underbelly of physical flaws, faults, fractures and defects. 

Today, Sawyer Free Library is plagued by severe limitations of space, navigability and mobility-device access. It is supported by aging, inefficient and obsolete facilities and systems that can’t be integrated or upgraded, resulting in a large carbon footprint. The floor plan presents glaring public-safety concerns, including poor sightlines on the children’s floor and outside adult bathrooms, in addition to stairwells that are concealed behind closed doors. 

The library’s fire detection/suppression systems have reached their end-of-life phase. Ventilation and filtration systems are inferior. There are no bathrooms on the first or second floor and none of the building’s restrooms are fully ADA compliant. The front entrance, stack widths and elevator are not ADA compliant. Staff areas do not meet OSHA spacing standards. Collections, including historical archives, are not properly temperature and humidity controlled. 

In terms of the user experience, visitors are met with narrow and poorly lit wayfinding. The overall layout is confusing and disjointed. Everything about how the library is run and how its staff engages the community is exceptionally inviting, but the interior itself does not signal a welcoming and vibrant space.

The library offers no collaborative digital learning space, no quiet study or reading room, an undersized children’s room with no distinct areas for toddlers or preschoolers and no dedicated teen room. The entire interior of the building is beset with disruptive, unmodulated acoustics and audio reverberation.

A modern public library’s assets must align to inspire learning, drive development, grow social capital, cultivate leadership and create opportunities. This new space will exponentially expand opportunities for the library to connect and collaborate with its more than 100 partner service providers in and around our community, and it will amplify this alliance’s collective impact on the city of Gloucester, Cape Ann and across the North Shore. 

Making Sawyer Free 2025 a reality would send a powerful message about our community’s priorities, proudly declaring: We care deeply about our past, present and future, and we embrace our obligation to teach ensuing generations about the place they’re going to grow up in, and live in and inherit. What characteristics do you envision for those future generations of Gloucester folk that come after you? What do you want them to know about this community? What do you hope they believe in and what are the values you want them to hold dear? 

Gloucester is a beautiful place to live, a healthy and safe place to dwell and a terrific place to raise a family. We have a lot of pride as a community, and we should have a library of which we are equally proud.

The Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners (MBLC) has awarded a provisional construction grant of $9.3 million to the Sawyer Free Library 2025 project, but only if sufficient community support is demonstrated first. In other words, the MBLC’s offer is time-limited, and the Sawyer Free 2025 capital campaign must hit a certain fundraising level to formally trigger the grant and turn the MBLC’s pledged donation into money in the bank. Due to pandemic-related delays, our campaign must now raise at least another $10 million by mid-fall to meet the MBLCs sufficient community support standard. Don’t wait! Your support today will help fund Gloucester's future.