No. 5 The Luck Public Library:Select Guide to Libraries of the St. Croix Valley
Select Guide to Libraries of the St.
Croix Valley
No. 5 The Luck Public Library
For The Hometown Gazette
By Tim Krenz
What makes a library? Anyone can
construct a building—of wood, of stone, bricks and mortar, or
metal, or bark. Its durability and elegance depend on the knowledge
and skill of the builder. Modern libraries, the traditional
“building,” the aether-plane “Cloud,” or even the one dimly
lit in a hidden basement somewhere in Polk County, can have its
books, movies, musics, maps, reference materials, artifacts, and
other unique items, in any form of media available. Yes, a library
might have a dedicated librarian, care-taking and preserving the
knowledge and inspiration contained within the hallowed stacks of the
collections.
Yet, as these segments for Select
Guide to Libraries of the St. Croix Valley assert, a library
must involve people. If no patrons, the library and all its items
exist only to serve as a tomb of knowledge and lost epiphanies,
becoming a capsule through time, useless to the living, a futile
legacy to the dead, and perhaps just a curiosity to the people
finding it in the future.
The combined Luck Museum and Library
provide a functional link between past and present for the residents
of this small Polk County, Wisconsin village, with a population of
near 1100. Of those residents inside the village limits, an
astounding 895 carry library cards. By the time the doors opened on
September 13, 2008, when surveyed earlier, the citizens of Luck had
answered “yes” overwhelmingly for a new library. At a projected
cost of $1 million, they also voted overwhelmingly for NO public
funds (i.e., tax money) to pay for it. The undertaking stuns in how
the new library became a reality.
The museum and library capital
campaign hired the services of D.A. Peterson & Associates from
the Twin Cities, MN. In the fund raising, strong support from Luck
businesses, private personal donations of cash, and only one
non-private contribution of $160,000 from a community development
grant, covered the total cash cost of the library to the sum of
$700,000, paying the loan in full and relatively quick. Of particular
surprise in this series of articles, the rest of the expected costs
of the library came from donations of in-kind materials and services
(or SWAG--”switched with another gift”) of a Luck community that
believed in the need for a new library, and in the need to use
private, non-public means to build it.
For example, the furnace, the
carpeting, the very foundation of this monument to community, (among
many other items) came from private and business donations. All
donations, properly assessed by D.A. Peterson & Associates for
tax-deductible value, added up to the value of $300,000 of that
projected $1 million. When added to the “community values” of
Luck, the ledger sheet on the project adds up to an infinite value
beyond that sum of money. With the building supervised by a Wisconsin
consulting firm, donated materials arrived when and how needed.
Rightly so, Luck's citizens can have a lot of pride in their
accomplishment. They built a truly outstanding piece of future
history, in its story and in the physical result.
Jill Glover, the library director,
affectionately called the museum and library building the “Taj
Mah-Luck,” since it reflects an architectural influence of its
South Asia-born architect. On the very corner of the building,
facing kitty-corner to the intersection on main street, a two-story
vertical cylinder forms the entry way through the double doors. One
goes to the left for the companion museum or to the right into the
library. Outside, tall arched window frames fit into one-story
cylinders on ends that allow a natural sunlight to accent the
interior. The green metal roof, ribbed on the facing, tone a whole
and healthy match to the cream stucco-like outside walls, a fine
texture held together in the unity of “small colors” by a dark
tan, three-foot high “bow around the blond walls,” that wraps and
visibly holds the exterior visage of the building at eye-catching
level.
About the circles represented in this
design, Jill Glover said, “The top circle we wanted to somehow
incorporate into the design, as the circle is important to Native
America culture.” Indeed, the circle of immutable wholeness,
especially in the grand entryway, represents the space-less-ness of
spirit, and the directed path, inner-contained in all directions, for
a pursuit of truth-in-self. As the cornerstone of modernity, and
timelessness with astounding design, the library and museum building
in
Luck's downtown can endure as a
foundation corner-mark for Luck's future growth.
Although having vigorously attempted
youth services programs, Luck decided the effort over-matched the
results, and so Jill Glover and her assistant, Colleen, and 5
volunteers, cater to the library's strengths for the youth and young
adults. The summer programs work, and the monthly movie night, as
holder of license to show copyrighted materials, adds a mix to the
library programs. With the simple attractions of any library,
well-done and very well-kept, Luck's public library contains 13,000
books in print, 55,000 e-books, 900 downloads, 2000 videos, 319
videos for download, 50 in-house databases, 900 book downloads, 6
computer stations, public wi-fi, and 28 periodical subscriptions.
And, remarkably, Luck's public library conducted 43,667 collection
transactions in 2012 (according to their annual report). To support
this effort of a good library done well, the approximately 9 members
of the Friends of the Library committee write annual grants that
obtain between $25,000 to $30,000 in funds for expanding library
projects.
As the museum of Luck will have a
separate mention in the future, it and the library will start a new
project, as Jill Glover explains. In 2014, the Luck Public Library
will begin an effort to collect Polk County documents, photos,
histories, family genealogies, letters, etc. for digitization and
on-line storage for referencing and accessibility. “We need to save
the stories,” Jill said. Anyone interested in the Luck Public
Library's Polk County-wide on-line history project can call the
library, or visit this extraordinary space in downtown Luck,
Wisconsin, at this time of our history.
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