海角大神

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Welcome to Oodi: Helsinki鈥檚 new 鈥榣iving room鈥

The new Helsinki Central Library, known as Oodi, doesn't just lend out books. It hosts community spaces, a theater, toolshops, and even a restaurant, all in an effort to promote Finnish civil society.

By Gordon F. Sander, Correspondent
Helsinki, Finland

The Finns like to call their country a 鈥渄esign nation,鈥 one with a natural affinity for devising creative and efficient solutions for both spatial and social challenges.

With the opening last month of Oodi, the barrier-breaking Helsinki Central Library, one of Europe鈥檚 most design-conscious countries has a library that matches that motto, as well as one which reflects its democratic ambitions. Oodi 鈥 which means 鈥渙de鈥 in Finnish 鈥 鈥渋s not just a library,鈥 says Tommi Laitio, Helsinki鈥檚 executive director of culture and leisure. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also a symbol of the goals we have as a society.鈥

According to Antti Nousjoki, one of the partners at ALA Architects, the Finnish firm behind the monumental $110 million, spaceship-like building, the designers鈥 objective was to create a library that empowered its users. 鈥淥odi does not relegate citizens to the role of spectator or dictate single functions and possibilities,鈥 says Mr. Nousjoki, 鈥渂ut rather acts as an open platform and tool for people to develop as they see fit.鈥

So if the building, which is sited at the entrance to the Helsinki peninsula, at the apex of the capital鈥檚 new metropolitan mall, also serves as a living monument to Finnish democracy, so much the better, says Nousjoki.

Oodi being foremost a library, books certainly have their place. The entire third floor 鈥 a soaring, tree-lined, open space聽dubbed 鈥渂ook heaven鈥 鈥 is devoted to them. The moniker is appropriate for a country that prides its status as the most literate in the world.

鈥淏ooks hold a central place in the Finnish imagination,鈥 says Raoul Grunstein, a聽former magazine publisher and the founder of T枚枚l枚 Urban, an urban development firm. His firm created the Korjaamo Culture Factory and the Allas Sea Pool, two public spaces that have helped change the self-image of this once hidebound harborside town. 鈥淔inland was a backward country in the 19th century.... Books and reading, as well as libraries, were crucial in the growth of civil society. It鈥檚 fitting and wonderful that Helsinki has a library 鈥 and a creative public space 鈥 which helps celebrate and extend that tradition.鈥

Only 100,000 books are actually stored at Oodi. Indeed, one of the criticisms of the futuristic facility is that its collection is too small. However, users can readily access the 5.5 million volumes in the Finnish library system, which are delivered by autonomous book trolleys. Oodi is the first library in the world to employ robots of this type while visitors are present. [Editor's note: The original version mischaracterized the novelty of Oodi's robots.]

However, Oodi is not just about books. The library鈥檚 two other floors, which are connected by a spiral staircase embossed with a selection of Finnish words, are devoted to nonliterary and extra-literary pursuits. The vast, emporium-like ground floor includes a restaurant, a movie theater, and several concert areas, as well as a European Union information center, a reminder that support for the EU and its liberal values remains strong in this corner of Europe.

The second floor is for the technologically and experimentally minded, boasting a 3-D printing room and virtual technology cave. There鈥檚 also a Roman forum-like row of benches for just hanging out. No gimlet-eyed librarians patrol the corridors here, ensuring that users keep quiet and obey the rules. Oodi is very much a do-your-own-thing sort of place. 鈥淚dle hanging out is allowed,鈥 reads the sign listing the library鈥檚 relatively few operating rules. 鈥淥odi is Helsinki鈥檚 living room.鈥

The whole makes for an urban asylum that both the city designers and the architects like to think goes where no library has gone before, and encourages Helsinkians and other visitors to experience and expand their ontological and emotional limits. 鈥淲e considered the fact that libraries will always be changing,鈥 says Samuli Woolston, one of the building鈥檚 other architects. 鈥淎lready their use is different from what it was 10 years ago.鈥

Both the architects and the city fathers expect that metamorphosis to continue, as Oodi 鈥済rows鈥 new functions while 鈥渙utgrowing鈥 others.

鈥淥odi is very much a work in progress,鈥 says Mr. Laitio, the city executive. He sees Oodi as a 鈥渕eans of allowing people to overcome their fear of the future. That鈥檚 what the second floor is about.鈥 He adds, 鈥淚t鈥檚 also supposed to be fun.鈥

鈥淚 suppose you could say that Oodi is the culmination of Finnish peoplehood,鈥 says Mr. Grunstein. 鈥淎t the same time,鈥 he adds, 鈥渋t鈥檚 an experiment to see if a library can be about something more than reading and can act as an empowering force for the greater community.鈥

One thing is inarguable: Oodi is wildly popular. Less than two months after its inauguration, Oodi has rapidly become one of Helsinki鈥檚 most popular attractions, as the teeming crowds of visitors attest. 鈥淲e have been very positively surprised by the response to Oodi,鈥 says Laitio. 鈥淚n the first four weeks we were open we had nearly 350,000 visitors, which is a lot for a city of 650,000.鈥

鈥淥ne unexpected and welcome surprise鈥 has been the demand for literature, Laitio says. 鈥淪eventy-five percent of our children鈥檚 books are on loan, as are 50 percent of our Finnish fiction titles. We鈥檙e happy about that.鈥

鈥淎bove all, we are happy about the way that Helsinkians have taken to Oodi,鈥 he says. 鈥淎fter all, this is their building. It is not uncommon to see visitors with tears in their eyes.鈥

One of those recent visitors is Finnish parliamentarian Pilvi Torsti. 鈥淥ne hundred years after our civil war,鈥 she says, referring to the fratricidal conflict that ushered in the Finnish republic, 鈥淚 am moved that we are a country and a society that is capable of something like this.鈥