Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Login

Login

Please fill in your credentials to login.

Don't have an account? Register Sign up now.

Calgary

Banff's 'Library of Things' lends tools and appliances, not books

Banff's library now has more than books on offer.

Residents of Improvement District #9 can now borrow tools and small appliances for free from the local library

Banff Public Library director Sarah McCormack stands in front of the library's new initiative, which allows people to borrow objects from tools to kitchen appliances. (Evelyne Asselin/Radio-Canada)

Banff's library now has more than books on offer.

The Alberta mountain town's public library is testing out a pilot project, lending out75 items from screwdrivers to food dehydrators to sewing machines to library customers for free.

The Library of Things has been library directorSarah McCormack's dreamsince she took the post in 2014.

"The library is the original circular economy. So it's continuing on what we do in our library of learning materials just in a different format," she said.

McCormack said the initiative, which follows others in Alberta, is particularly suited to a town like Banff that's home to many renters.

Banff's Library of Things offers items from kitchen appliances, to tools, to crafting and cleaning items even a home theatre projection set for free, seven-day loans to library card holders. (Evelyn Asselin/Radio-Canada)

"The Town of Banff is a very unique community. We have a lot of people who come here for a season or a short amount of time. We have affordability issues such as food security, accommodation," she said.

"Often when you have housing, it's shared or small. So you may not be able to afford to buy some of these items. You may not have a place to store them. You may want to try them and see if it's something that you like."

The items are available to residents of Improvement Disctrict #9 who have library cards. Items can be borrowed for a maximum of seven days.

McCormack said since the equipment lending pilot project began on Oct. 7, the most popular items have been a pie plate and a drill.

The library is also hoping to receive donated items, like tools, to supplement its offering. The library's current object catalogue and list of needs is available on its website.

With files from Evelyne Asselin