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Gabriel García Márquez library interior
The library’s director said staff work to make the space ‘an extension of the home’. Photograph: Jesus Granada/Photographer
The library’s director said staff work to make the space ‘an extension of the home’. Photograph: Jesus Granada/Photographer

Barcelona community resource named world’s best new public library

This article is more than 8 months old

Gabriel García Márquez library in working-class district specialises in Latin American literature

A Barcelona library specialising in Latin American literature has been named the best new public library in the world by the International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions at its congress in Rotterdam.

The library, named after the Nobel-winning Colombian novelist Gabriel García Márquez, opened last year in the working-class neighbourhood of Sant Martí de Provençals.

In awarding the prize, the jury praised both its architecture and its innovative approach to encouraging local people to use the resource, the interaction between staff and the local community, the flexibility of the spaces and services, the commitment to learning and the sustainability of the building.

“We’ve received the prize precisely because we opted for a model that makes the library an extension of the home, with armchairs and spaces that invite people to feel at home,” said Neus Castellano, the library’s director.

“This had led to small children and elderly people in particular spending hours in the library, and they don’t come just to take out books and they spend much longer here. The neighbourhood, which is densely populated and has a lot of students, really needed this library.”

“We never expected to win,” Castellano said. “No Spanish library has ever even been nominated. It’s recognition for all the work the city has put in. Libraries have also played a big role in Barcelona, they’ve always been important.”

Later this year the library, designed by the Suma architectural practice, will open a “room of the senses” designed for children with special needs and learning difficulties.

It has a capacity of 800 but some days has hosted as many as 1,300 people. As well as readers, Castellano described the phenomenon of “library tourism”, with people coming to the neighbourhood to take pictures of the airy timber-framed building.

The International Association of Librarians praised the library’s timber-framed architecture. Photograph: Jesus Granada/Suma Arquitectura

Xavier Marcé, responsible for culture on the city council, said the award was a vindication of a policy the city embarked on 30 years ago to create a network of libraries, of which the Gabriel García Márquez was the latest.

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García Márquez lived in Barcelona from 1967 to 1975, arriving shortly after the publication of his groundbreaking magical realism novel One Hundred Years of Solitude.

He was one of several leading Latin American writers who have lived in the city, among them another Nobel laureate, Mario Vargas Llosa. The library holds a collection of 40,000 documents relevant to Latin American literature.

It also runs a community radio station called Ràdio Maconda, in honour of the fictitious village of Macondo in García Márquez’s celebrated novel.

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