Driving along Alabama’s State Route 61 is like a journey through the land that time forgot. Past catfish ponds and rolling pastures, the highway pauses for a moment where it swells to form downtown Newbern (population 189), a rustic collection of warehouses and storefronts from the turn of the last century. But over the last couple of decades, Rural Studio, Auburn University’s design-build program, which is based here, has left its mark, erecting a fire station and other structures. For its latest endeavor, the school has transformed a diminutive masonry bank building into a modern, 1,600-square-foot library—Newbern’s first—that maintains the local down-home spirit while providing an inviting community resource.
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The building has a typical American story. Built in 1906 as the Bank of Newbern, it went on to have a varied life after the financial institution failed during the Great Depression. It housed an insurance office, a livestock-feed storage facility, and then sat empty, occasionally serving a stint as a polling center. In 2012, the owner, a local family, donated the use of the building to Rural Studio. The town postmaster had been pushing for a library, and, later that year, four thesis-year students were assigned to the project. In Rural Studio tradition, the small team oversaw the planning, design, and construction over the next 24 months. “The students not only design and build,” points out acting director Xavier Vendrell, “they work with the community to figure out what they need and define the organization behind the building.”
The team realized more space would be needed to accommodate a flexible program for both private study and a host of social and educational activities for a wide range of age groups. “There were two basic questions,” says team member Will Gregory. “How do you preserve this old building? And what does the new small-town library look like?” Restoring the front and side facades, the students pushed out the building’s back with a 700-square-foot extension, clad in locally sourced cypress to differentiate it from the masonry. Inside, in the long, open reading room, the new and the old connect seamlessly, with birch plywood ceilings and CNC-milled shelves lining the interior. A row of alcoves along the building’s north side contains computer stations (with the town’s first public Internet access), study nooks, a deep window seat, and restrooms and storage, while a shaded courtyard allows study and gatherings to flow outside. The team salvaged over 8,000 bricks from the old vault, using them for paving and low walls in this area. They rescued other original elements, such as the vault door, which hangs near the entry, and the teller counter, which was repurposed as the librarian’s desk.
This little project reflects many ideas that have shaped the recent designs of larger libraries around the world, as digital technologies have emerged and these civic institutions have reconsidered their role in the community. But it does so without losing sight of its roots and the people it is now serving in this corner of 21st-century small-town America.