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[PADG:1232] Re: cost of shelving
- To: padg@xxxxxxx
- Subject: [PADG:1232] Re: cost of shelving
- From: Wes Boomgaarden <boomgaarden.1@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 10 Oct 2006 15:53:18 -0400
- Message-id: <7.0.0.16.2.20061010153239.033c4258@osu.edu>
- Reply-to: padg@xxxxxxx
Cathy and colleagues:
I'm not certain of the meaning of your phrase "the annual cost of
'shelving a book'", but will take it to mean the cost of storing it
on library shelves once it is acquired. With that assumption, and
with a good cup of coffee beside me, I offer this approach to cost
estimation...
A very good source is Leighton & Weber's Planning Academic and
Research Library Buildings (ALA, 1999, 3rd ed.), a Bible in the field
of building renovation and construction planning. Its Chapter 6
"Programming Housing the Collections" is excellent in
describing space requirements for varied types of analog-format
collections, especially its0 section 6.2.
Armed with that data AND with the specific space costs on your local
campus or facility, you may be able to estimate a real annualized cost to
house a book in a particular building on your campus.
So, for example, we at Ohio State use "plant operations &
maintenance" -- or POM -- cost figures, which are paid by all units
at this university for the space they occupy. The cost of POM at
this time is $12.36 per assignable square foot (asf) per year, a cost
that includes a host of costs for lights, energy, maintenance, etc.
If the library facility houses, say, 14 volumes per assignable square
foot in its conventional-stack book storage areas, the cost per year
would be about $.88 per volume per year. If, in contrast, it
stores 161 volumes / asf in its Harvard-style depository, the cost would
be a bit less than $.08 per volume per year.
Cathy, I hope you somehow find this trivia of value.
Best,
Wes Boomgaarden
Ohio State University Libraries
At 01:26 PM 10/10/2006, you wrote:
For those of
you PADGers who have your reference hats on this fine afternoon,
I have been asked to provide annual cost figures for
'shelving a book'. Obviously this cost depends greatly on the
particulars of the shelving location, such as open or closed stack,
regular or high density, location of the building on or off campus,
geographical location of University (Manhattan vs. Gainesville), as well
as determining if are you worried about overhead and personnel,
etc. I have been hunting for one or two key, fairly recent articles
on the topic and have been coming up short. I have several from the
late 1980's/early 1990's ( Michael Cooper, 'a cost comparison of
alternative book storage facilties', from Library Quarterly v.59, no.3
1989 and by the same author, 'Sensitivity of book storage strategy
decisions to alternative cost assumptions' Library Quarterly, v.61 no. 4,
1991) plus the Hain-Teper article from 2003 in Collection Management
v.28, no.4 ('Time and Cost analysis of preparing and processing materials
for off site shelving at the UIUC').
Other than these three, which are not quite right, I
have not found much on the topic. Anyone out there have any
ideas? I am not looking for any construction information, or
processing into an off site facility, or changing shelving locations in
the OPAC, I just need a plain old discussion of what it takes to keep a
book safe for a year.
I searched the PADG list archives to no avail on this
topic.
Thanks,
Cathy
Cathleen L. Martyniak
Head, Preservation Department
Smathers Libraries
University of Florida
Gainesville, FL 32611
352-392-6962 (voice)
352-392-6597 (fax)
cathy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx