Surrey Public Library

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Surrey Public Library
File:Surrey Public Library logo 2011.jpg
Established 1983
Branches 9
Collection
Items collected books, e-books, music, cds, periodicals, maps, genealogical archives, business directories, local history,
Size 704,000 [1]
Access and use
Circulation 4 million [2]
Other information
Budget CA $11.8 million [3]
Director Melanie Houlden [4]
Website www.surreylibraries.ca

Surrey Public Library is a municipal public library system serving Surrey, British Columbia and the surrounding Lower Mainland.

Services

Surrey Public Library has services and programs for patrons of all ages.

  • Information and reference services
  • Access to full text databases
  • Community information
  • Internet access
  • Reader's advisory services
  • Programs for children, youth and adults
  • Delivery to homebound individuals
  • Interlibrary loan
  • Free downloadable ebooks and audiobooks

History

Prior to 1983, Surrey was a member of the Fraser Valley Regional Library. In 1982, Surrey held a referendum on the withdrawal from FVRL, which passed. On March 17, 1983, Surrey began operating as an independent municipal library. The Surrey Public Library includes the Newton branch, designed by Patkau Architects, which was awarded the Governor General's Award for architecture in 1994.[5] The Semiahmoo branch, which opened in 2004, was the first LEED certified public library in Canada.[6]

Collection

Surrey provides patrons with books, music CDs, CDROMs, books on tape/CD, databases, videos, DVDs, magazines, reference books, newspapers and e-books. Library material is available in Arabic, Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Hindi, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Punjabi, Polish, Russian, Spanish, Tagalog, Urdu, and Vietnamese. The database collection include Alldata (mechanical - Guildford only), Novellist, Press Display, and Worldbook online.

Locations

File:Newton SPL Library (2009).jpg
The award-winning Newton Library was officially opened on May 2, 1992

The library has nine branches:

  • City Centre (Replacing the now defunct Whalley Branch)
  • Cloverdale
  • Fleetwood
  • Guildford
  • Newton
  • Ocean Park
  • Port Kells
  • Semiahmoo
  • Strawberry Hill

City Centre

City Centre Library was designed by Bing Thom Architects.[7] The library is 77,000 square feet on four floors and it is a LEED certified green building. The official Grand Opening was held on September 24, 2011.[8]

Hours

File:Fleetwood Library SPL1.jpg
Fleetwood Library branch of the Surrey Public Library
  • Monday to Thursday: 09:30–21:00 (09:00-21:00 at City Centre)
  • Friday: 09:30-17:00 (09:00-21:00 at City Centre)
  • Saturday: 10:00–17:00
  • Sunday: 13:00–17:00 (Year round at all locations except Port Kells; closed on Sundays before a statutory holiday that falls on a Monday.)

Assistive Technology

ART (Accessing Resources and Technology) is located at Guildford and Semiahmoo Branches. These computer workstations help those with visual impairment, learning, reading or physical disabilities read and listen to books, documents and web pages or use word processing applications.

Genealogy

The Cloverdale Branch of Surrey Public Library, located on the same corner as the Surrey Archives and Surrey Museum, holds the largest collection of Canadian genealogy resources in Western Canada, with over 4000 microfilms and 1300 books. Unique record sets include Métis Scrip, Chinese Head Tax Registers, Li Ra Ma, and the Peter Robinson papers for example.

The publication "Canadian Genealogical Resources: A Guide to the Materials Held at the Cloverdale Library" details the library's microfilm holdings, includes research instruction and can be searched online. Patrons can also access the Ancestry Library Edition database and Heritage Quest at the Cloverdale Branch.

Beyond the extensive holdings, the department offers orientations to the collection once a month and provides a variety of programs on genealogical topics, generally offered from September to May.

2008 Writer-In-Residence

As part of its 25th anniversary, Surrey Public Library hosted a writer-in-residence program. The writer-in-residence is playwright and fiction writer Mansel Robinson.

Awards

Year Award Giver
1990 John Cotton Dana Award Outstanding Public Relations among Libraries
1994 Governor General Award for architecture Newton Branch Patkau architects  
1997 Citation for Citizenship Citizen and Immigration Canada
2004 Cultural Diversity Award Surrey Delta Immigration Services Society
2005 Honorable Mention Community Learning - Conference Board of Canada
2006 Cultural Diversity Award Surrey Delta Immigration Services Society
2009 DIVERSEcity Award for Business, Public Institutions DIVERSEcity Community Resources Society

2015 Library Board

  • James Bennett
  • Marina Haddad
  • Perbeen Mann
  • Sarah Salmond
  • Karen Reid Sidhu
  • John Shepherd
  • Linda Stromberg (Chair)
  • Upkar Tatlay
  • Council Representative: Dave Woods
  • Chief Librarian and Secretary of the Board: Melanie Houlden

References

  1. [1] Surrey Libraries 2010 Annual Report
  2. [2]
  3. [3]
  4. [4]
  5. cf. 1994: Patkau Architects Inc. Architecture Canada, The Governor General’s Awards for Architecture: pp.92-99, Newton Library
  6. http://www.cla.ca/conference/2005/poster_sessions.htm
  7. http://www.bingthomarchitects.com/#/featured/111/
  8. http://www.surreylibraries.ca/location-hours/4682.aspx

External links