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Library Buildings around the World

Library Buildings around the World

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South Africa<br />

dhk Architects, Cape Town – South Africa<br />

http://www.dhk.co.za<br />

Libraries:<br />

Ahmed Baba Institute <strong>Library</strong>, Sankore precinct, Timbuktu – Mali 2009<br />

Gross square footage: 50.000 sq.ft., Total construction cost: $8.36 million<br />

Just a few miles from <strong>the</strong> Niger River Delta in Mali, Timbuktu appears as a labyrinth of single-story mud buildings. A city<br />

of near-mythic status, it is <strong>the</strong> last outpost before <strong>the</strong> great Sahara Desert, a place synonymous with being almost<br />

impossible to reach. Despite its remote location, <strong>the</strong> city boasts a heritage of scholarship that has produced an astounding<br />

number of manuscripts. The new Ahmed Baba Institute of Higher Islamic Studies and Research, completed in 2009,<br />

introduces state-of-<strong>the</strong>-art techniques for conserving, exhibiting, and studying <strong>the</strong>se famous Timbuktu manuscripts. The<br />

new institute is part of a 10-year initiative to replace its aging predecessor, founded in 1970 and located less than a mile<br />

away. After French colonial rule ended in 1960, Timbuktu slid into decline and scholars went to great lengths to protect <strong>the</strong><br />

city’s legacy, even burying manuscripts in <strong>the</strong> sand. An estimated 60 to 80 private libraries formed a grassroots conservation<br />

effort in Africa. According to UNESCO, a staggering 300,000 manuscripts exist in <strong>the</strong> Timbuktu region alone. In recent<br />

years, African leaders have used architecture to reclaim <strong>the</strong>ir countries’ intellectual heritages. Egypt, for example,<br />

commissioned <strong>the</strong> Norwegian firm Snøhetta to design a grand library in Alexandria with <strong>the</strong> goal of rekindling <strong>the</strong> city’s<br />

reputation as a seat of learning. In 2001, a year before <strong>the</strong> inauguration of <strong>the</strong> library in Alexandria, <strong>the</strong>n South African<br />

president Thabo Mbeki traveled to Timbuktu on an official visit, helping to found <strong>the</strong> Timbuktu Manuscripts Project and<br />

set in motion plans to construct an impressive new home for <strong>the</strong> manuscripts. dhk Architects of Cape Town designed phase<br />

one of <strong>the</strong> $8.36 million, 50,000-square-foot Institute, creating an archive of 20,000 manuscripts and a public library with<br />

reference materials on <strong>the</strong> culture of <strong>the</strong> region. Andre Spies, <strong>the</strong> project architect for dhk, designed <strong>the</strong> institute and now<br />

heads his own practice in Cape Town called twothink architecture, which completed phase two — fitting out <strong>the</strong> interiors.<br />

Spies describes Timbuktu as being “like a dry Venice.” Just as Venice must resist sinking into its lagoon, present-day<br />

Timbuktu must fight against <strong>the</strong> encroaching Sahara Desert. The ancient city unfolds as a series of garden courtyards<br />

tucked behind imposing walls along narrow streets cloaked in deep sand drifts. Spies derived his design concept from <strong>the</strong><br />

juxtaposition of ancient and modern Timbuktu. “The new city is much more rigid and is laid out on a grid, while [<strong>the</strong> old<br />

city] grew sporadically over time.” His design creates a hybrid of building and street, contemporary and traditional.<br />

Circulation paths create “wall play” similar to <strong>the</strong> organization of <strong>the</strong> city’s streets, where openings between buildings vary<br />

in width and are “very organic,” according to Spies. The complex connects <strong>the</strong> new city to <strong>the</strong> old city via outdoor hallways<br />

and aligns its main artery with <strong>the</strong> minaret of <strong>the</strong> Sankoré mosque, a 15th-century structure made with mud and declared<br />

by UNESCO to be a <strong>World</strong> Heritage Site. To respect <strong>the</strong> vernacular architecture of <strong>the</strong> region, Spies chose to build<br />

primarily with mud, which requires maintenance after <strong>the</strong> annual rains. He found a local mason who mixed mud with<br />

concrete to make <strong>the</strong> facade rain-repellent, and he purchased mud bricks from craftsmen on <strong>the</strong> streets. Because <strong>the</strong> archive<br />

and conservation lab required more protection, <strong>the</strong> architect specified standard concrete-block cavity walls for this portion<br />

of <strong>the</strong> building. By placing <strong>the</strong> conservation lab so it faces a hallway, he let visitors watch technicians at work. And by<br />

bringing visitors down a long ramp to <strong>the</strong> subterranean archive and a small exhibition space, he created a sense of<br />

procession. An air-conditioned, 300-seat auditorium and an outdoor amphi<strong>the</strong>ater can accommodate symposia and lectures.<br />

To connect <strong>the</strong> various programmatic elements, Spies designed expansive outdoor hallways that converge at a courtyard.<br />

Head librarian Baba Tandina says he enjoys watching schoolchildren fill <strong>the</strong> library, which is particularly cheerful in <strong>the</strong><br />

late afternoon when light filters through ornate, carved screens. The screen configurations — radiating diagonals, zigzags,<br />

and pyramids — derive from manuscript graphics and West African textile patterns. The airy double-height main ga<strong>the</strong>ring<br />

space hosts rows of desks and shelves of books, while <strong>the</strong> upstairs provides space for private study. To reduce <strong>the</strong> amount of<br />

sand blowing into <strong>the</strong> library, <strong>the</strong> architect placed entry doors off <strong>the</strong> courtyard (ra<strong>the</strong>r than <strong>the</strong> street) and designed <strong>the</strong><br />

courtyard so scholars could congregate <strong>the</strong>re and enjoy air cooled by a fountain.<br />

Overall, Tandina prefers <strong>the</strong> new institute to <strong>the</strong> old one, which he describes as stuffy and too warm for <strong>the</strong> manuscripts. He<br />

knows that air conditioning is a rare luxury in Timbuktu and that many visitors will have never encountered a glass<br />

exhibition cabinet before. Yet Tandina and his staff are concerned about <strong>the</strong> dependability of <strong>the</strong> building’s modern<br />

conveniences. If machines break down in <strong>the</strong> desert, technicians are 500 miles away. To test <strong>the</strong> consequences of an outage,<br />

<strong>the</strong>y shut off power for two weeks, and <strong>the</strong>y were reassured when <strong>the</strong> temperature of <strong>the</strong> archive room remained nearly<br />

constant. He also wishes <strong>the</strong> new fire management system had manual controls. The introduction of a new building is<br />

challenging in <strong>the</strong> low-tech, mud-built setting of Timbuktu. Albakaye Ousmane Kounta, <strong>the</strong> Malian writer, poet, and<br />

storyteller, criticizes <strong>the</strong> building as “too modern.” Whereas fortresslike walls concealed <strong>the</strong> internal configuration of <strong>the</strong><br />

former institute, <strong>the</strong> new one blurs inside and out with outdoor hallways arrayed along a “free plan.” This modern approach<br />

is uncommon in West Africa, where public and private spaces are strictly demarcated to keep out sand, roving donkeys, and<br />

itinerant people. The new design encourages access and openness, but it has drawbacks as well. In addition, some spaces —<br />

such as <strong>the</strong> auditorium — have rigid functions not easily adapted to o<strong>the</strong>r uses. Since <strong>the</strong> Institute is not yet equipped to host<br />

conferences, <strong>the</strong> auditorium will probably go unused for a while. In time, <strong>the</strong> staff of <strong>the</strong> Ahmed Baba Institute will adapt to<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir new complex, which will enrich Timbuktu and become a locus for international scholarship. For <strong>the</strong> time being,<br />

though, Timbuktu is adjusting to <strong>the</strong> new facility. This illustrates how architecture pushes change, which is exactly what<br />

Andre Spies intended to do with this remarkable project. by Caroline James (Caroline James has worked extensively in<br />

product design and architecture. She is currently pursuing an M.Arch. at Harvard.) (http://archrecord.construction.com)<br />

Design concept (06-05-2005)<br />

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