13 May 2008

Chicagoland MG Club's tool lending library

I got a search hit for "tool lending library Chicago", and didn't know of one. Here's some results of a bit of research.

The Chicagoland MG Club is a membership organization for owners and restorers of MG cars. In addition to keeping a library of books and videos for their members, they manage a tool lending library with items like an air-acetylene torch, an engine hoist, an exhaust gas analyzer, and an MG-specific panel nut wrench.

Their guidelines for which tools they share (and which they don't) are instructive for anyone thinking about putting together a similar program:

The Club is also open to suggestions for additional tools to add to the Program. Keep in mind the standard philosophy, moderately expensive, to be used only occasionally by any one person for very short term, easy enough to be used by an average shade tree mechanic, portable, and requiring no special adaptations for power supply, exhaust connections, and so on.

13 December 2007

Check out a pedometer at the library!

from the Pakennam (Australia) News:

PAKENHAM Library is giving residents the chance to put the spring back into their step this summer.

The John Street library is now lending pedometer kits as part of Casey-Cardinia’s Step into Summer at Your Library program.

Pakenham Library branch manager Melissa Martin said the kit provided locals with the perfect opportunity to improve their health and fitness.

This library is a branch of the Casey-Cardinia Library Corporation, which has a blog Invisible Ink which is a year old in December 2007.

Walkers who want to keep track of their progress can look at Walker Tracker- I'd love to see a library host a community walking program.

Technorati Tags: , ,

26 November 2007

Tool libraries (and cake pan libraries) in Michigan

The Detroit Free Press has a story about libraries with unusual collections in Michigan:

Libraries lend out art, tools and more

November 25, 2007

BY CHRISTINA HALL

FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

Need a wrench? Check out the Grosse Pointe Public Library.

How about some art? Try the Ann Arbor District Library.

Looking for a fishing pole? The St. Clair County Library System can help.

And if you're in the Upper Peninsula and need to borrow a cake pan, well, visit the Manistique School and Public Library.

Libraries aren't just repositories for books and CDs, they house collections that help cardholders do everything from fix their homes to create different shapes of cookies.

It's a nice story - including some sense for the history of these collections and how they have accumulated over the years.

19 November 2007

Tool library at Grosse Pointe Public Library (Michigan)

In a continuing series on tool libraries this from Grosse Pointe MI:

Tools are located at the Central Library and are loaned free with your library card. We are constantly adding new tools. If you don’t find what you are looking for on this list, please contact us.

Provided and maintained by THE GROSSE POINTE ROTARY CLUB
as a continuing memorial to Robert M. Orr, Director, 1949-73.

some examples of tools loaned: in the A's there's ADJUSTABLE WRENCH; AUGER, EARTH; AWL; AXE; the N's have NAIL PULLER, NAIL PUNCH SET, NEEDLES, NIPPLE EXTRACTOR, NUMBERS.

15 October 2007

TechShop: Build your dreams here

I've written about tool libraries before, but this is something a bit different:

TechShop is a fully-equipped open-access workshop and creative environment that lets you drop in any time and work on your own projects at your own pace. It is like a health club with tools and equipment instead of exercise equipment...or a Kinko's for geeks.

TechShop was founded in 2006 by Jim Newton, a lifetime maker, veteran BattleBots builder and former MythBuster.

TechShop is located in Menlo Park, California, on the San Francisco peninsula 25 miles south of San Francisco.

Anyone can come in and build and make all kinds of things themselves using the TechShop tools, machines and equipment, and draw on the TechShop instructors and experts to help them with their projects.

They were featured in Inc Magazine, and they're riding on the success of Make Magazine.

This is not-quite-a-library (or even a "tool library"), but it has some of the characteristics of a collection of creative tools that libraries are trying to build. It is for profit which lets them do some things that libraries can't.

Technorati Tags: , ,

16 August 2007

Incoming search report for 16 August 2007

Thanks to a report from 103bees I get a snapshot overview of the week's search queries. Here's what people are finding on Superpatron.

SUPERPATRON (http://vielmetti.typepad.com/superpatron)
> book espresso machine nypl
> ann arbor employment weird
> friends of ann arbor
> used ladders shovels foster tools portland
> new publishing system for books new york library
> boston museum of fine arts membership reciprocity
> net zed
> wall bed, "wall of books"
> librarian gifts
> open source library catalog

SUPERPATRON QUESTIONS
> how special library is helpful in research?
> how to arrange books in a home library
> how to take care of library books color sheets
> how to run scripts in firefox
> how a librarian can run for office

Any answers or more feedback to any of these welcomed.

Technorati Tags: , ,

01 October 2006

Berkeley (CA) Tool Library

One in a continuing series of clippings and stories about tool libraries, this one from a 2005 Berkeley Daily Planet:

On a recent Wednesday morning at 11:45, two pickup trucks and a station wagon had already pulled into the drive in front of the Berkeley Tool Lending Library at the corner of Russell and Martin Luther King Way.

Adam Broner, who maintains the library, and Bud Burleson, a retired city electrician who is filling in that day, wheeled out several containers holding an assortment of shovels, posthole diggers and other garden tools. On the wall Burleson hung the pole saws and below them he arranged several aluminum step ladders.

When Broner opened the two doors to the library, another busy day began. Some patrons came in returning tools, others were checking them out. Broner checked library cards and IDs while answering the phone that never seemed to stop ringing. Burleson tried to find a minute to attend to the ongoing job of sharpening a few tools.

Even though folks are often lined up several deep, Broner, who has been working at the tool library for 14 years, manages to be full of good humor and ready to dispense advice.

“This time of year, our garden tools are most in demand. In fact, I’m going to order some new weed eaters. We just can’t keep up with the demand,” he said.

There was a 2004 NY Times story - Library Science, Home Depot Style - here picked up at Sivacracy:

On a sunny Saturday this fall, patrons were lined up four deep at a public library branch in Berkeley, Calif. But they weren't there to check out best-sellers or a stack of videos.

"I'm returning the chop saw and a spade and a wheelbarrow I already put back in the shed," said a young woman in shorts and a T-shirt, hefting the saw onto the counter.

"You owe 20 bucks in fines," said a librarian, Jason Armstrong, whose wire-frame glasses fit the bookworm stereotype but whose chest tattoo suggested a less cerebral side. "Fifteen bucks for the chop saw and five bucks for the wheelbarrow."

Such is a typical exchange at the Berkeley Tool Lending Library, a branch of the library system started with a $30,000 federal community development block grant in 1979. Since then the budget has grown more than three-fold, and borrowers number in the thousands.

Beth Kohn in the San Francisco Bay Guardian has a bit more:

Berkeley and Oakland have made tool-lending services available through their public library systems. In 1979 the Berkeley Public Library started the Berkeley Tool-Lending Library (1901 Russell, Berk. 510-981-6101, www.berkeleypubliclibrary.org/tool), the first of its kind in the Bay Area, with a grant from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development. The program still functions as part of the public library and continues to maintain personal relationships with the people borrowing its cement mixers and Sawzalls, even with an estimated checkout rate of 6,000 tools a month. "[It's] different than when someone checks out a book," tool-lending specialist Adam Broner says. "Someone's drain is clogged, or they need to do something before their mother comes to visit. Each tool has a story behind it."

The Berkeley library has served as an example for fledgling tool-lending libraries in other towns. Broner trained a colleague to establish a library in Portland, Ore., and at the invitation of the Berkeley Rotary Club, he gathered a collection of donated tools and set up a library in the small town of Chacala, Mexico.

11 September 2006

North Portland Tool Library, Portland OR

From their web site:

NPTL: Tools and the Power to use them.

The North Portland Tool Library (NPTL) is a community resource that loans a wide variety of tools to community members free of charge. The Tool Library benefits North Portland residents by reducing the costs of maintaining and improving their homes, building community, and sustaining diverse, livable neighborhoods.

Registration with the Library is free to residents of North Portland. Please see the membership tab for additional details about registration and requirements.

The Library is located in the basement of the historic Kenton Firehouse at:
2209 N. Schofield, Portland OR, 97217

Metroblogging Portland writes:

North Portland has its own tool lending library and it is celebrating it's one year anniversery (in October 2005) with over 300 brand new tools it will lend out to residents for free. Yes people, FREE! The brainchild of Jason Hatch, Matt Moritz, Laura Dalton, and Jason Henshaw, the tool library is there to help maintain affordability and build community by providing these free resources to residents of North Portland. The library also offers different hands on workshops to the community to instruct people on the proper use of tools and tool safety.

This Old House Magazine says:

And in Portland, Oregon, Jason Henshaw stands behind the counter of the North Portland Tool Library doling out, for instance, a jigsaw and advice on how to use it to cut a doggie door out of a human-sized door.

Henshaw, a health-care administrator with a penchant for power tools, cofounded the tool library last October in the basement of an old firehouse. By providing home-improvement tips and everything from plumb bobs to table saws at no cost, the volunteers hope to fight urban blight and foster community pride. An added bonus: Locals never have to buy a tool they’ll use only once a decade.

Technorati Tags: , ,

25 April 2006

Oakland tool library

The Temescal Tool Lending Library branch of the Oakland Public Library (California) offers over 2700 tools available for loan, as well as books and how-to videos. The tools can be used for a variety of purposes, including carpentry, gardening, plumbing, and electrical work. The branch manager is Ty Yurgelevic.

A complete tool list of items available for borrowing includes roofing spades, a pick mattock, stud finders, a two-person tree saw, a electric drain snake (large and small), and dozens of other items.

Some articles about the library include
* 2002 East Bay Express, "Tools Rush Out" - Happy post-digging and weed-whacking!
* 2004 Oakland Tribune, "Tool Lending Library Revives Home Improvement Projects"

Yurgelevic apprenticed at the Berkeley tool lending library before starting out in Oakland.

(one in an occasional series of posts, in which I do the complete answer to Google queries that come in after the fact)

30 December 2005

Tool libraries

There are a handful of libraries around the US with tools collections. The general idea is that library card holders can borrow axes, saws, power drills, roto-rooters (clean them before you bring them back!), and other rarely used but essential equipment for a few days.

I thought about this prompted by a posting in Kevin Kelly's Cool Tools about energy meters and how they can save you hundreds of dollars a year by identifying inefficient appliances. It turns out that the Ann Arbor District Library has four of these "line loggers" for patrons to borrow. (One of them is on reserve for me right now!) Figure out how much electricity your fridge or computer is using and take steps to conserve.

Cool Tools ran a piece on these tool lending libraries in 2004. He lists collections at the Oakland Tool Library, the San Francisco Tool Library, and the Berkeley Tool Library. I've seen others online Kansas City, MO run by the non-profit Westside Housing, a non-profit "toolmobile" run by the city of Columbus, OH, and the North Portland (Oregon) Tool Library. There's a list of tool-lending libraries in Wikipedia.

Subscribe to Superpatron

What they're saying about Superpatron

  • So you've got Ed exploring the possibility space, and John working to enlarge that space, and together they've created a virtuous cycle of innovation. Now this is obviously an extreme example. You are not going to find a superpatron of Ed's caliber and a superlibrarian of John's caliber in every town. But I think the dynamic at work there can apply more broadly. And if it does, it will matter that these patrons and librarians are situated in a local context. (Jon Udell, Remixing the Library, GRL2020)
  • Der Supernutzer beschreibt 10 Möglichkeiten, der Bibliothek zu helfen....Den wichtigsten Punkt hat er vergessen, ihn aber selbst erfüllt. Sozusagen als Präambel könnte man also anführen:

    “Übe konstruktive Kritik an der Bibliothek. Ohne Resonanz können die Leute da drin nicht wissen, was Du willst.” Infobib.de

  • How come only some books in the Google Book Search have “find in a library” links next to them? Diglet asks, and gets an answer, sort of a lame one if you ask me. update: Kevin mentioned in the comments that it would be great to see this for all books in Google Books. I went to bed thinking “Oh yeah, I should look into that….” and while I was sleeping, Superpatron, aka Ed Vielmetti solved the crime, er problem, and created a Greasemonkey script (a plug-in that you can run with Firefox) that does this for Ann Arbor and can be modified for any library. (Jessamyn West)
  • Curse you Superpatron! t's way past my bedtime, but the Ann Arbor Superpatron has been planting ideas in my head again… (Dave Pattern)
  • Superpatron is a blog run by a patron. The author posts entries about events and articles relevant to the library community, but does it with a patron point of view. (North Texas Regional Library System)
  • The blogosphere's resident "awesomest patron ever," Edward Vielmetti, appears in an article in School Library Journal about how he wrote a script tweaking (ahem, improving) Google Book Search. Vielmetti's blog, Superpatron, is one I read daily and highly recommend to anyone in libraries looking to get a very smart user's perspective. (Librarian In Black)
  • When I wrote him back, I called him the “AADL Super Patron,” which is very coincidental, since he has been planning to create a blog with almost the same name. Today, Superpatron is live and I’m sure it will quickly be filled with Ed’s terrific ideas about making libraries more responsive to patrons’ needs. So hurry up and subscribe already, ok? (Meredith Farkas)
  • The Superpatron (faster than a speeding reference librarian…) posts a presentation on the use of del.icio.us for research. Steven Cohen, Library Stuff
  • I've talked about Edward Vielmetti here before, but I never had the right name for him. Now I do. He's Superpatron! (Jenny Levine)
  • Last fall, in Ann Arbor, Michigan, I gave a talk entitled Superpatrons and Superlibrarians. Joining me for this week’s podcast are the two guys who inspired that talk. The superpatron is Ed Vielmetti, an old Internet hand who likes to mash up the services proviced by the Ann Arbor District Library. That’s possible because superlibrarian John Blyberg, who works at the AADL, has reconfigured his library’s online catalog system, adding RSS feeds and a full-blown API he calls PatREST. (Jon Udell)
  • Little did I know that when I pointed to Ed Vielmetti’s blog, I was not only coining a phrase, but providing the name for Ed’s brilliant new blog. Ed is that (unfortunately still) rare creature that not only groks the net in fullness, but also has use for his public library. (Eli Neiburger)
  • Die Ann Arbor District Library hat einen Nutzer, der sie liebt. Und nicht nur das, er schreibt darüber. Oliver Obst

upcoming.org

Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 08/2003