The wish list for a new Walker Library was long, but one aspiration really stood out: "We wanted to create a new living room for Uptown," said Jennifer Yoos, a principal of VJAA, the Minneapolis architecture firm responsible for the new people magnet that now graces the corner of Hennepin and Lagoon avenues in Minneapolis.
Done. Working on a cramped site — and squeezing every dollar out of a Great Recession-era budget — the firm ingeniously pieced together the puzzle that is the 21st-century library.
Staffing and security issues dictated a single-floor design, and when patrons enter for the first time they can grasp, almost instantaneously, how the place works. That seldom happens.
Even better, the prodigiously user-friendly library is also a daydream-inducing setting for sitting and reading, whether it's a book, newspaper, magazine, tablet or computer screen. If a Starbucks counter were tucked behind the information desk, I'd probably never leave.
Borrowing a beloved trait from the lofty reading rooms of old, the wide-open, single-floor interior is flooded with sunlight, both direct and diffused, even on the most overcast of days. An east-facing bank of 14-foot windows grabs the morning light, and strategically placed clerestory windows pull in the afternoon sun.
Another dimension comes through the ceiling, which is punched by a half-dozen light-disseminating glass boxes covered in yellow screens. The VJAA crew, led by architect Vincent James, dubbed their invention "Skycubes," and all six cubes are laid out in a jagged-toothed row, each set at a slightly different orientation. As the sun crosses the sky, they filter its rays through an ever-changing spectrum of yellows that swing, as the day progresses, from canary to a verging-on-chartreuse.
It's all so airy and inviting, (two rare attributes when associated with the words "free and open to public") and while the entire building's footprint is roughly equivalent to that of an average Old Navy store, the interior's sweep makes it feel roomier.
A timeless color palette (coordinated by Barnhouse Office, the St. Paul interior design firm) predominates. The crisp white of the roof's exposed steel trusses and the warm honey of the walnut bookcases provide a muted backdrop for cheerful pops of Sunday comics colors, most noticeably in the comfort-minded furniture.