Minneapolis Vows To Protect Rapson Library

Story by Margaret Foster / Feb. 28, 2007

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In Minneapolis this winter, city leaders are meeting to find
a way to save a modern library that its library board shuttered on Dec.
29.
A task force has been meeting every week to discuss merging
the city and Hennepin County library systems, says City Councilman Gary
Schiff. "One of the requirements of the merger, from the city's point
of view, is that [the library] be reopened."
Modern architect Ralph Rapson designed the Southeast Library
as a bank in 1964; it was converted to a library three years later.
Rapson's famed Guthrie Theater was demolished in December,
the same month the Minneapolis Public Library Board decided to close the
Rapson library, the Roosevelt Library, which is a National Register-listed
Carnegie library, and a third branch.
As the city tries to reopen the Southeast Library, it is
also trying to designate it as a local landmark, Schiff says, because
the library board, which owns the building, had planned to sell the empty
lot.
"That was a breathtaking assumption that made me say,
'Hold on,'" Schiff says. "Any demolition will require a permit
by city council, and there is no interest on city council in demolishing
a Rapson gem like the Southeast Library."
Rapson's design called for only a third of the 18,000-square-foot
library to be above the ground. "It's mostly a subterranean building,"
says Phillip Koski, Minnesota architect and writer. "It's one of
his best works. It's kind of like a temple."
The Guthrie demolition was a wake-up call for the state, Koski says. "There's a sense in the preservation community in Minnesota that mid-century modern is the next challenge for preservation, and Ralph Rapson's buildings are definitely landmarks and signify the best of Minnesota architecture from that period. He's still alive, and his influence carries a lot of weight. You see it everywhere."
At 93, Rapson is still a practicing architect in Minneapolis. Two years ago he lamented the imminent loss of his Guthrie Theater.
"I'm not one of these people that thinks that every building
has to remain forever. Times change, conditions change, circumstances
changewe must move on," Rapson told Minnesota Public Radio in 2005.
"But so many people have told me what wonderful times they've had coming
and going to the Guthrie, that I think it's a terrible loss. People have
asked me, 'Does it hurt?' Yes it hurts! It's like losing a child, if you
will."
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