Tag Archives: Westport Public Library

Library Meets Its Makers

The Westport Public Library is very popular. It’s definitely cool.

And incredibly innovative.

Its latest project is a new Maker Space, on the main level. Designed as a venue for creativity and production, it’s the 1st of its kind at any library in Connecticut.

The Maker movement — introduced in April at the Library, with a fair that attracted over 2200 people — is a reaction to a long historic period in which innovation and invention were reserved for specialists. As more individuals become inventors, Maker Faires and Spaces are popping up everywhere.

Though not yet in any Connecticut library.

Except ours.

The Westport Library Maker Space will be a place for anyone — and everyone — to create content as well as consume it.

Why the library? According to a press release, the Maker Space — like a library — is “an incubator for ideas and ventures.

“In this era of hands-on learning and interaction, libraries should provide experiences that take people from imagining to actually producing.”

And for those Westporters — you know who you are — who think the town spends too much money on unnecessary “stuff,” Maker movements are seen as economic engines. They encourage entrepreneurs to emerge and thrive.

The Westport Library’s 1st Maker project is the construction of two 15-foot wooden airplanes. Maker-in-residence and builder Joseph Schott invites anyone interested to help him craft these planes this summer. (Two random people have wandered in already, and joined him.)

Additional planning is underway. Library programs will feature talks by “Makers,” including a Westporter who made his own life-sized functional robot.

Also ahead: the purchase of a 3D printer (to print 3-dimensional objects from digital files).

The Westport Library will discuss all this — and more — at a press conference next Monday (July 2, 11:30 a.m.).

Can’t “make it” there? No problem. Our uber-technologically savvy library will live stream the event, at http://www.ustream.tv/channel/makers.

(For highlights of last April’s Mini Maker Faire, click the YouTube video below.)

If You Build It,They Will Come To The Maker Faire

Last September, Mark Mathias took his kids to the New York Maker Faire. The event — an exhibition/showcase/festival where techies, crafters, educators, tinkerers, hobbyists, musicians, engineers, artists, students and anyone else entertains, informs and connects with kindred spirits of all ages and backgrounds — inspired the entire family.

Mark’s son was especially impressed with the marshmallow shooter, made from PVC pipe.

Three months later, for his 7th birthday, he and his friends build a similar contraption. “They learned about plumbing, projectiles and air flow,” Mark says. “And they had fun.”

Alan Winick will exhibit his personal submersible yellow submarine at the Maker Faire. Eight feet long and 2300 pounds, it has gone 120 feet deep in Long Island Sound.

On Saturday, April 28 the Maker Faire comes to Westport. The 1st event of its kind in Connecticut, it will fill the Westport Library and Jesup Green with contraptions, crafts, art, engineering, food, music, robots, rockets, magicians, jugglers, and whatever the cat drags in.

Over 50 exhibitors will provide demonstrations, hands-on-workshops and do-it-yourself resources. Anyone and everyone is invited to make, build, design, hack, eat, drink, listen, create and play.

The Maker Faire has already inspired a number of people. When Mathias asked the library for use of the McManus Room, Bill Derry — assistant director for innovation and user experience (!) — did more. He offered the Great Hall and Children’s Library too.

Westport Sunrise Rotary provided seed money. The Downtown Merchants Association will sponsor a “Battle of the Homemade Bands.” (That’s right: make your own instruments. You’ll be judged on creativity, tonal quality — and fun.)

A Rube Goldberg Competition begins with a pile of stuff (maybe a lawn chair, tubes, marbles — whatever the aforementioned cat drags in). Participants then construct a contraption in true Goldberg fashion.

You could call Westport’s Maker Faire a celebration of invention, creativity and resourcefulness.

Or you could just call it “way cool.”

(The free Westport Mini Maker Faire is set for Saturday, April 28, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at the Library and Jesup Green. All are welcome. For more information, email royfuchs@snet.net or call 203-856-4321. The deadline to apply as an exhibiting “Maker” is April 1; click here for a form. In honor of their 30th anniversary, CLASP Homes is a co-presenter.)

Mike Ogrinz is a longtime robot builder. The one on the left was constructed with cardboard and tin foil. His B9 robot (right, from "Lost in Space") will be on display at the Westport Maker Faire.

The Library’s Post-Apocalyptic Moment

If you’re not a teenager, you may not have heard of The Hunger Games.

But Jaina Lewis and Bill Derry have. And that’s good news for Westport’s youth.

Jaina (the Westport Library‘s young teen librarian) and Bill (the much-0lder but quite savvy “assistant director for innovation and user experience”) are collaborating on a unique, and very cool, event — for 12- to 18-year-olds only.

On Friday, March 9 (7:30-10 p.m.), the 74th Annual Hunger Games take place in the stacks.

No, you did not miss the first 73.  The 74th Games are where The Hunger Games — the 1st novel in a young adult trilogy by Ridgefield author Suzanne Collins — begins.

Set in a post-apocalyptic world in the country of Panem — the former North America — the dark story portrays 12 districts, all slaves to the capital, where citizens are kept hungry and isolated.

In the Hunger Games, 2 “tributes” — 1 boy and 1 girl from each district — compete in a televised fight to the death in a dangerous arena. Eventually, only 1 remains.

The books — translated into 26 languages — are a worldwide phenomenon. A movie of the same name will be released on March 23.

Seizing on the intense interest — and, in Bill’s words, “showing an experiential side of the library, supporting reading and learning, by really moving inside of it” — Westport’s Hunger Games are set to begin.

The publicity is as stark as Collins’ Games themselves. “Food rations will be given,” the flyer says. “Only Tributes in grades 6-12 are eligible to attend. Parents will not be in attendance: parents must entrust their children to the Capitol.”

Tributes can earn prizes for themselves and their District by training in survival skills, testing their Hunger Games trivia, and competing in a Tribute costume contest (it’s important to look great before the battles).

Plenty of planning has gone into the event. Many high school and middle school students have helped with sets and lighting. Local vendors have donated food. Two bands — Disabled Time and Amplitude — will play.

The library’s Hunger Games are attracting a wide range of participants, Bill says. Some were avid readers of the trilogy; others found out about it from friends.

A gladiatorial battle to the death in a post-apocalyptic world. Costumes, food, music — all in the library stacks.

What’s not to like?

(Registration costs $18, and ends Tuesday, March 6. Click here to register. For more information, email jlewis@westportlibrary.org)

Amelia Earhart Lands In Westport

Three years ago, at the end of a Westport Library “Booked for the Evening” event, Sue Davis thanked director Maxine Bleiweis for a lovely evening. Sue said she’d enjoyed the broad cross-section of the community that had come together, and casually offered to get more involved with the library.

Within days, she was the new chair of WestportREADS.

For a few years, Sue had read the book selected for the annual project (the entire town is encouraged to read the same work; over the course of a month the library sponsors lectures, films and other special programs based on that book’s theme, encouraging a “community dialogue”).

But she’d never gone to any of the events. “I was busy raising my kids,” she says. “I didn’t go out at night.”

Quickly, Sue grew enamored with WestportREADS.

“It was so exciting to watch it all unfold,” she explains. “The entire staff — especially Joan (Hume) and Marta (Campbell) — take one book. They brainstorm companion books that are appropriate for all different age groups. They think about all the aspects of the book, and find an amazing group of speakers.”

This year’s book — the 9th annual — is I Was Amelia Earhart, Jane Mendelsohn’s novel that continues the story from the day the pioneering aviator and her navigator disappeared over the Pacific. Here, Earhart returns to life to tell about her childhood, marriage, public life and eventual fate.

“Joan and Marta look at Amelia Earhart as one of the first true feminists,” Sue says. “So they’re bringing in Susan Ware, a leading feminist biographer, to talk about that idea. If I’d read the book on my own, I don’t think I’d have made that connection.”

As director of WestportREADS, one of Sue’s jobs is to help encourage the entire community to participate, in whatever programs appeal to them. Her reward comes at random moments — standing in a supermarket line, say, overhearing a young woman and an older man talk about that year’s book.

She’s also looking forward to a tropical island-themed party. (In the novel, Earhart and her navigator land on a tiny island called Nikumaroro).

There will be music, a variety of rums, and plenty of fun. “It’s a fun-raiser, not a fund-raiser,” Sue says. The event builds on the success of last year’s first-ever party — New Orleans-themed, because the novel was Zeitoun, a riveting tale set in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

I Was Amelia Earhart is “a quick, easy read,” Sue says.

She adds, “I might not have chosen it myself. And when I read it, I didn’t really get it. But at our first meeting with Marta, talking about all the different points of human interest — and all the ways WestportREADS could go with it — I understood how important it will be in creating the sense of community we want.

“And now that we’ve got all these great events planned, I realize how great this choice really is.”

This year’s WestportREADS includes a talk by the author, films, book discussions, talks about Amelia Earhart, displays of aviator photographs and paper airplanes, a flight simulation game for teens, and the tropical island party. All events are free and open to the public, except for the party which requires tickets. For a full schedule of events, click here.

The program begins Tuesday, January 3 (2 p.m.) with the movie “Amelia.” A poetry contest for all Westport students is open now through January 13. For details and submission guidelines, watch the YouTube video below.

RIP “Needle Park”

In the 1960s, the small park on the corner of the Post Road and Main Street was called “Needle Park.”  Supposedly, teenagers shot up heroin there.

In reality, the spot — adjacent to what was then the library, graced with benches, flowers and a fountain donated by the Sheffer Family — was a great place for playing guitar, protesting the war, hanging out and making out.

The library moved across the street.  Shops and banks (and Starbucks) moved in.  The park fell into disuse.

In May, it was bulldozed.  A construction worker assured me that, after renovation, it would still look like a park.

More like a parking lot.

“Public access” continues to be guaranteed, I am told.  But the only “public” that will ever set foot on that uninviting expanse of concrete that once was Needle Park is whoever goes into whatever store happens to have its door there.

“Miss Annie” Reuter Retires

Annie Reuter loves lots about life.  But her 2 absolute favorite things are children and books.

When she walked into the Ridgefield Library 2 decades ago — to start her new job as children’s librarian — she told herself:  “This is where I’m supposed to be.”

But life got even better.

In 1997 she moved to the Westport Public Library.  Between the library’s support for kids, Westport parents’ championing of children and her own over-the-top enthusiasm, it was a match made in library heaven.

Annie Reuter

Annie did not major in library science, or children’s literature.  Her degree was in human services.  Before Ridgefield she worked as a court advocate and rape crisis counselor, was an occupational therapist, and — this comes close — ran a nursery school.

But none of that compares to the joy of being around children all day, introducing them to reading.

“Children’s librarians open up worlds, through stories, imagination, play, language and rhymes,” Annie says.

Working with kids gives her a chance to “go back and join children as they suspend reality,” she adds.  “To a child, Winnie the Pooh is as real as a policeman.  There’s something magical about that.”

Most youngsters come into the children’s library without any idea what they’re looking for.  Annie talks with them, finds out their interests, and steers them to just the right books.

“When you see them open a book, and open up a new world, that’s magical too,” she says.

One of Annie Reuter's favorite sights in the world.

Kids grow up fast — we all know that.  Their tastes move quickly from Dr. Seuss to Harry Potter to Kurt Vonnegut to John Irving.  (I wish.)  But many come back upstairs to visit Annie.  She remembers them all.

They may be big 7th graders — or, now, bigger college students — yet Annie still sees them “as a child in Story Time.”

Next month, Annie retires.  She looks forward to playing with her 3 “delicious” grandchildren, traveling — and perhaps doing something at the library in Southbury, where she lives.  (“It’s been quite a commute,” she says diplomatically.)

Annie will miss “the babies, the children, the staff and the town.”  She calls Westport’s energy “irreplaceable.”

“This is a town that absolutely champions children,” she says.  “There is a love of reading everywhere.”

Kids, she notes, “can’t go to the library unless grownups bring them.  And here, they always do.”

(A reception honoring Annie Reuter is set for Saturday, December 10, 10:30-11:30 a.m. in the Higgins Room.  All Westport parents — and, more importantly, youngsters — are invited.)

Memorial For Manny

Manny Margolis — the longtime Westporter known for his devotion to civil liberties and underdogs, who died August 17 at 85 — will be remembered this Saturday (October 8), at a pair of special events.

Manny Margolis

Manny’s memory will 1st be honored at the 11 a.m. peace vigil on the Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Post Road bridge downtown.  He was a longtime participant, dating back to the Vietnam vigil days at the old Town Hall.

At 11:30 a.m., the group will walk from the bridge to the Westport Library’s McManus Room.  There, anyone who wishes to can speak about Manny.

Margolis family friend Sonny Fox — the veteran TV personality — will run the event.

There will be plenty of memories — but no food.  Saturday is Yom Kippur, a traditional Jewish fast day.

TED Talks To Westport

Some Westporters are addicted to cigarettes.  Others, to “American Idol.”

I’m addicted to TED.

Ted is not a person, though human beings are an integral part of TED.  The acronym stands for Technology, Entertainment and Design, but the tagline says it best:  “Ideas Worth Spreading.”

TED talks — available on its website — are bite-sized videos (18 minutes max) packed with compelling, mind-boggling lectures on topics as diverse as the life that teems throughout the universe, the world of penguins, and the upcoming “demise of guys.”

Like crack or heroin, once you’ve taken a hit of TED, you need more, more, more.

And just as certain drugs are “gateways” to others, TED leads to TEDx.

TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share TED-like experiences.  This Tuesday (August 23, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.), the Westport Library hosts a TEDx event.

In keeping with both TED and the library’s focuses on the future, this TEDx will examine what today’s innovators and tomorrow’s leaders are thinking — from finding new ways to live in a technologically integrated world, to helping senior citizens in their homes, and more.

And who better to explore those ideas than teenagers?

Ben Meyers — a June graduate of Staples, where he organized Ecofest — spearheads the upcoming TEDx.

Presenters on Tuesday include rising Staples seniors Carson Einarsen, Logan Rosen and Isaac Stein, and recent grad Adam Yormark.

If you’ve never seen a TED video — or been to a TEDx event — go.  You will be inspired, provoked, challenged and energized.

Not to mention, addicted.

(Click here for free online advance registration — it’s required.  PS:  Lunch will be served.)

No Reservations Here, Either

Yesterday’s caution-tape caper spurred alert “06880” reader Carol King to take this photo.

The site is the library’s upper parking lot.  Carol checked — there’s no handicap permit inside the Mercedes.

That’s no surprise around here.

But can’t the driver even bother to park illegally correctly?

Sunday By The River

The jury is out.

Not on the art — the judges’ decisions come later — but on the 38th annual Westport Arts Festival itself.

It’s been held on the river edge of Parker Harding Plaza and adjacent Gorham Island for a couple of years now.  Before that, it was held in the middle of Main Street.

Some artists like the new location.  A cooling breeze blows off the river, and the setting is much more scenic than before.

Other artists — not so much.  They say there’s less foot traffic, less energy, and lower sales.

Of course, you can also blame the economy.

Or the gorgeous weather that sends folks scurrying to the beach, not the business district.

Judge for yourself.  Both the site, and the art displayed there.

A photographer -- and potential customer -- takes a shot of some intriguing art.

Intriguing sculptures line Gorham Island.

This is not a sculpture. It’s a living statue. I’m sure this guy was much happier standing by the river — not the middle of Main Street — for hours on end.

A youngster finds artwork less interesting than a large tree, stuck in the middle of the Saugatuck River.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the Post Road, the ever-smiling Mimi Greenlee oversees the controlled chaos that is the Westport Public Library's summer book sale.