CZWG: Canada Water Library

A new public library is a rare thing. Birmingham is replacing its brutalist behemoth of books with a new building by Mecanoo architects; on a smaller scale FAT architects completed a refurbishment of Thornton Heath Library. In 2006, David Adjaye rebranded libraries as Idea Stores, to be found dotted around East London, and in 2000 Will Alsop won a Stirling Prize for his Library in the Sky in Peckham. Now there is the £13.7m Canada Water Library by London-based architecture practice CZWG.
The new library sits on the edge of the Canada Water basin, a relic of the area’s former life as a hive of activity with shipyards, jetties, piers and warehouses that transformed the marshlands of Rotherhithe from the late 1600s onwards. As the nature of shipping changed, the shallow basins became unsuitable for the massive vessels bringing in goods and the area entered a period of decline. Like many other once-thriving ports across the UK, the area became typified by poor housing, overcrowding, high crime rates and widespread poverty, and it was heavily bombed in the Second World War.
The decline continued, and between 1978 and 1983 more than 12,000 jobs were lost. London’s docklands were described as some eight square miles of dereliction by the then Secretary of State Michael Heseltine in his book, Life in the Jungle: ‘I had found myself in a small plane, heading in that direction by way of the London’s East End. My indignation at what was happening on the South Bank was nothing compared to my reaction to the immense tracts of dereliction I now observed. The rotting docks – long since abandoned for deep-water harbours able to take modern container ships downstream – the crumbling infrastructure that had once supported their thriving industry, and vast expanses of polluted land left behind by modern technology and enhanced environmentalism.’
The London Docklands Development Committee was founded in 1981 by Heseltine. Although the LDDC disbanded in 1998, it was responsible for transforming 1,756 acres of dockland and 417 acres of basins across Southwark, Lewisham, Greenwich, Tower Hamlets and Newham as part of the Greater London Development plan launched in 1976. The designation of the area as an Enterprise Zone was responsible for the transformation into what we see today. Though it is a model that is being reintroduced by the current government, it leaves many questions unanswered as to the incentives offered to business to build privately on the land. The current masterplan has its foundations in the work of the LDDC, albeit initiated under the last Labour government.
Canada Water is a strange landscape of high-density apartments and social housing, arranged around a Tube station designed by Eva Jiricna, the basin and the spectacularly bland Surrey Quays shopping centre. A product of dubious political policy and speculative housebuilding that can be attributed to both the New Left and the Old Right, it is here in Canada Water, above the Tube station, that the new library stands.


Finished in a warm oak veneer, the staircase takes the visitor up through two floors in a 360-degree sweep. With it, CZWG has provided a procession to the large reading room that can hold 40,000 books, overlooked by a gallery that contains the reference library and 30 workstations. The library floor is arranged into three areas, with books for children, teenagers and adults stored on meandering bookshelves that lead visitors to the windows. Above, the roof dips at the centre to accommodate the trusses concealed behind it, again drawing the visitor to the periphery of the room. ‘We hope that this open-plan space will be sociable, but also a refuge to go to by yourself,’ says Gough.
Gough and CZWG have produced a building that begins to make sense of a landscape that lacks focus and coherence on an urban scale. It may not be to everyone’s liking, but it draws together the few redeeming factors of its immediate context into a robust and striking civic institution. The building may lack a little finesse in the finishes and the raking walls provide a few useless pockets that pepper the building (‘The staff say they can chuck a sofa in; they are happy,’ says Gough) –
but this is a small price to pay for the library, which is a grand space that feels comfortable for the individual.
‘When designing a library, there is a danger of being overawed with the responsibility of such a project,’ says Gough. ‘This building has some of our larkiness to it, in the overall shape. But most importantly we feel it works. It’s not an architectural caprice based on a library. ‘I hope that the building engenders a sense that the world of the mind is as important as the consumer part of life.’
