Subject: Lab design
With regard to James Mason's question about lab design in Distlist 5:63: >Kansas State University recently received the ok and, more importantly, >the funds to build an addition to and renovate the library.... Because >we'll be reallocating space, I may have a chance of getting a quality, >well planned room for book repair and minimal, basic conservation >work.... Further advice from people on building a library materials >repair room is welcome. First, congratulations--you must be very excited about this. (For those who don't know, I was Jim's predecessor at Kansas State and I have vivid memories of the space he is now working in.) What you appear to have in mind is a unit for doing basic collections maintenance repairs, nothing involving high level item conservation work and/or chemical treatments. I have a few suggestions, none of which is prohibitively expensive. 1. Resist any efforts to locate the collections maintenance unit in the basement. In addition to the corrosive effect on staff morale, basic collections maintenance repairs are much easier to do if you have some natural light. The ideal location would be the first floor, not too far from an elevator, to simplify moving book trucks in and out of the unit. 2. The floor should be able to bear the weight of a board shear, flat storage files, a guillotine cutter, and any other heavy equipment you might want to acquire in the future. 3. There is a joke I've heard at several preservation-related meetings of the American Library Association, to the effect that the first challenge a new preservation librarian faces is getting a board shear through a 36" door. Insist that the collections maintenance unit be designed with double doors to avoid being later tempted to knock out a wall. 4. A sink is something you cannot do without. Try, if you can, to get a laboratory sink installed, something wide and flat, preferably divided. If at all possible, arrange the floor space so that wet and dirty jobs can be confined to one end or corner of the room. 5. Nobody ever has too much storage and counter space. Make sure you have room to store full sized sheets of book board, and enough shelving to keep work in progress arranged in some kind of logical order. 6. Likewise, nobody ever has access to too much electrical power. Be sure to include space and appropriate wiring for a PAC terminal [public access catalog]. You don't say whether your office will also be in this space, but if so, make sure the wiring will be adequate for your pc and printer. Sara R. Williams Preservation Librarian CU-Boulder *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:6 Distributed: Sunday, June 28, 1992 Message Id: cdl-6-6-002 ***Received on Tuesday, 23 June, 1992