Frank George wrote:I see it has been cancelled. What exactly are the facts/explanations?
Louise Richardson wrote:Colleagues
As I am sure you are all aware, the redevelopment of our Main Library has been a central theme and key priority in our Academic, Estates and Development strategies for the past several years.
As the hub of academic life, the Library is at the core of who we are and what we do. It ought to reflect our regard for scholarship, our commitment to excellence, our standing as a university, and our shared ambition to place study and scholarship at the heart of a truly world class university.
A library should be judged by the strength and breadth of its collections and the access to them it offers . A good library is one that gets these fundamentals right.
Since 2005 the University has wrestled with, consulted upon, refined and deferred final judgment upon a number of redevelopment proposals. These have ranged from a £25 million extension to the more recent plan for a £46 million wraparound refurbishment. This plan would give us more and better study space and would place our special collections in the heart of the library in a setting they deserve.
These proposals all offered their own unique benefits and challenges. They all however have two things in common – each was conceived and elaborated before the effects of the global economic downturn became fully and locally apparent and each tended to overlook the importance of investing in our collections.
Over the last 18 months, the landscape of higher education in the United Kingdom has changed markedly. From a position of relative buoyancy and growth, universities are now struggling to manage deep cuts in funding and the certainty of more to follow. Many are making staff redundant, or closing departments. In St Andrews, these are scenarios which we are determined to avoid if at all possible.
At the same time, the growth of technology has had a major impact on the way students and scholars use libraries. Moreover, the commissioning of the New Medical School and associated moves will have the effect of moving 1000 of our undergraduates to the North Haugh. There are real debates to be had about the merits of centralised library provision versus a decentralised model and about how best to create a library that can adapt to the breathtaking pace of technological change in how we gain access to teaching and research materials.
In the light of the fiscal and planning uncertainty we face, it is my view and that of my Principal’s Office colleagues that we cannot at this point commit the institution to spending £46 million on refurbishing the fabric of our central Library.
We hold equally firmly to the view that we cannot any longer delay taking fundamental action to improve our existing Library facilities and collections, notwithstanding the pressures of recession. Nor should we lose sight of the ambition which informed our original redevelopment vision.
Subject to final approval by Court, we therefore intend to bring forward work on the library and begin in June 2011 on an interim programme of far-reaching improvements which will renovate the Library environment, expand our collections and provide additional study spaces.
This programme will represent an investment of £14 million in total. Some £3 million is currently being invested in a new Library Store. A further £7 million will be committed to modernise the Library environment. We will renew furniture, fixtures, carpet, lighting, heating and the entrance-way. IT Services will vacate premises in nearby Butts Wynd and these will be renovated to provide additional study spaces. We will investigate creating additional work and study spaces elsewhere in town and on the North Haugh.
200 new study spaces will be created by September 2012 and a total of 600 by 2014, the date by which our original redevelopment scheme was due to conclude.
At least as importantly, we will commit an additional £4 million over four years to expand our Library collection, something which earlier iterations of redevelopment proposals had largely ignored.
Our aim is to have the major part of these works complete by September 2012, and to conduct renovations in a phased way which will minimise impact upon students and staff.
I believe that this programme will in itself deliver a modern, refreshed library environment, additional study space and a much improved collection in St Andrews. Crucially however, it should not be seen as a one in a generation event. It is an interim measure, a step along the way to the wider vision of a reinvented and wholly rejuvenated Main Library.
We will not lose sight of that vision and we will do everything we can to ensure it is realized. Our fundraising teams in Development will continue to seek support and donor involvement for the bigger picture as we move towards and through our 600th anniversary.
I would like to thank you all for your patience, contribution and engagement with our Library redevelopment proposals over the past few years. I know that this has been a long and challenging process and there have been several changes of direction and emphasis along the way.
I fully acknowledge how disappointing it is for all of us to have to delay the realization of our ambition to have a library truly worthy of this great university. I wish I were writing to you with a different message. I would not be writing, however, if I were not convinced that this plan is the best available means, within the severe financial constraints we face, to respond expeditiously and decisively to legitimate student complaints of overcrowding and staff complaints of inadequate collections.
I hope that now the University is taking decisive action rapidly to improve the Library and its collections you will all continue to support and contribute your energies and time to this enormously important project.
Louise Richardson
Principal and Vice-Chancellor
DACrowe wrote:But if you had to prioritise something, why on earth focus on the carpets, lighting and heating?
macgamer wrote:Although I agree with the Principal, avoiding job losses amongst teaching staff should be the priority given the current economic climate.
macgamer wrote: Smartening the place up to make an inadequate library look less inadequate seems to be the crux of the plan.
DACrowe wrote:I guess my aesthetic tastes are different than most.


Archie wrote:Just a quick recap of the Principal's actions since she joined St A.
Alienate the R&A? Check.
Refuse the KK Club use of University property on the grounds of elitism and sexism? Check.
Refuse the Lumsden Club use of University property on the grounds of elitism and sexism? Oh gosh, NO.
Slammed home her claim to fame ad nauseum that the IRA tried to recruit her? Check.
Reclaimed the old Principal's residence forcing several departments to relocate? Check.
Spent/wasted over £1m of the University's money tarting up said residence? Check.
Given a disgraceful and frankly disgusting interview stating her hatred of the English? Check.
Pissed about with the Library plans and told other people that the proposed plan wasn't going ahead before she bothered to tell the student reps or the rest of the students? Oh big fat check there.
...She appears to be the sort of person who would be more comfortable somewhere like Birmingham or Manchester.
Archie wrote:Slammed home her claim to fame ad nauseum that the IRA tried to recruit her? Check.
Reclaimed the old Principal's residence forcing several departments to relocate? Check.
Spent/wasted over £1m of the University's money tarting up said residence? Check.
Given a disgraceful and frankly disgusting interview stating her hatred of the English? Check.
Pissed about with the Library plans and told other people that the proposed plan wasn't going ahead before she bothered to tell the student reps or the rest of the students? Oh big fat check there.
Quite frankly it doesn't take a genius to see that our esteemed Principal seems to be hell bent on bringing the University of St Andrews to its elitist knees before swanning off and starting all over again somewhere else.
Gilded Youth wrote:My own personal opinion is that until we get the Irish/American bird out and put someone with a bit of respect for the university and its institutions in, the world will turn away from our beloved university. We should bring back Brian Lang.
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