Green Libraries Week
Libraries Week is an annual showcase and celebration of the best that libraries have to offer. Each year we pick a theme and explore the innovative and surprising things that libraries are doing to support their communities.
In 2023, Libraries Week became Green Libraries Week! Between the 2nd and 8th October, we celebrated the work going on in libraries across Scotland and the rest of the UK focused on sustainability and climate change. Check out our highlights below:
Scotland’s Green Libraries Gathering
In a Libraries Week first, we simply couldn’t contain our excitement to seven days, so instead we started our celebrations early on Friday 29th September with Scotland’s Green Libraries Gathering, taking place at the heart of Scotland’s Climate Week.
Benefiting from a range of inspiring environmental insights shared throughout a full day of workshops led by the National Library of Scotland, Glasgow Women’s Library, Scottish Book Trust, University of Strathclyde, Paperboats and many more, Scotland’s Green Libraries Gathering marked the perfect early start to Green Libraries Week. Watch the entire event above and discover how both the CILIPS Research Fund and our Green Libraries Scotland Grant Fund are strengthening library sustainability across Scotland.
Green Libraries Scotland Grant Fund – Seeds to Success
Speaking of the Green Libraries Scotland Grant Fund… School Librarian and GLS Grant Fund recipient Donna Baird caught up with CILIPS at the start of Green Libraries Week to share her experience of applying for the Fund. Donna shared the serendipitous timing of the Fund with an idea she already had, emphasising the positive change that will grow from the library amongst the wider school community.
Donna’s funded project, ‘Seeds To Success,’ will enrich her school’s new Support for Learning space and adjacent garden with Kinder boxes decorated by pupils, for which the children are selecting books to support their emotional, sensory and environmental needs. Creating a safe and welcoming space for pupils to read outdoors and relax, Seeds to Success is encouraging mindfulness and the wellbeing benefits that both reading and nature can bring for young people, staff and parents.
We hope that this wonderful example will encourage anyone who has been contemplating applying for library funding of any nature. Donna’s words of wisdom are sure to inspire or give the necessary nudge forward!
Glasgow Women’s Library x Green Libraries Week
Especially for #GreenLibrariesWeek, we enjoyed a free tour of the wonderful Glasgow Women’s Library garden to discover how their innovative Net-Zero Handbook offers a practical plan for carbon reduction, environmental care and climate justice.
Led by GWL Green Creative Cluster champion and #CILIPS23 speaker Gabrielle Macbeth, our lucky attendees learned firsthand about the transformation of what was once a litter-infested urban space into a welcoming statement to all library visitors, simultaneously serving as a link in a nature network for pollinator insects and local birdlife. We were also amongst the first library professionals to engage with GWL’s new Net-Zero Handbook, an impactful climate call-to-action that will provide the foundation for the Library’s sustainability initiatives in subsequent years and from which libraries of all sectors can take inspiration.
Visit CILIPS Instagram to see what a ‘reely’ good time we had!
Sustainable BSL for Libraries
‘Can we help?’ CILIPS Membership Officer Kirsten embraced the annual challenge of growing her British Sign Language knowledge by practising a few sustainability-themed signs in the inspiring setting of Glasgow Women’s Library. Watch along on CILIPS Instagram and grow your inclusive climate literacy. Why not learn a few sustainable signs of your own and continue the conversation with library users?
National Poetry Day
What more inspiring combination could there be than National Poetry Day landing at the heart of Green Libraries Week on Thursday 5th October? Kirsten and Leah from the CILIPS team ‘wasted’ no time in sharing some sustainable sonnets by iconic Scottish poets Kathleen Raine and Edwin Morgan, while our friends at North Lanarkshire Libraries even composed their own eco-haiku. Wow!
CILIPS Library Litter Pick
Compostable bin bags were at the ready as we called on libraries across Scotland and beyond to roll up their sleeves and clean up their acts, getting stuck into the sustainability spirit by joining our nationwide library litter pick.
Had the weeds in their library gardens grown a little too tall? Could their readers’ nearest bus stop do with sprucing up? We came together to highlight the unique role that libraries have in inspiring environmental action within our communities by removing rubbish and having fun. Bonus points were awarded to all those who also inspired their library users to take part!
For anyone who really couldn’t leave their desk on this fun Friday afternoon, there was still an opportunity to play a part in the CILIPS litter pick by tackling digital carbon footprints – deleting bulky files, refining email signatures and following the guidance shared in this recent Jisc report. Thanks for litter picking, library people!
Library5
Libraries Week just wouldn’t be the same without our legendary series of annual challenges, motivating our members to showcase the great (green) activities taking place within their own libraries. From green scenes and sustainable shelfies, environmental reading recommendations, eco-hacks and more, check out this year’s challenges below and follow #GreenLibrariesWeek on X and @librariesweek on Instagram to see everything that the CILIPS community shared…
Green Walls for Green Libraries Week
If, like us, you were green with envy to glimpse the gorgeous Green Walls created by libraries around the globe as showcased in this brilliant blog post by Alex Jovanovic, our Robert Gordon University CILIPS placement student for 2023, then Green Libraries Week was the place to be. Llanelli Library in Carmarthenshire, Wales, chose this week to showcase that they are now host to a dynamic external Green Wall of plants, using a special system used to create a planted area on a vertical surface. Echoing the findings of Alex’s research, Welsh Libraries highlighted that there ‘are many environmental benefits to Living Walls including bringing significant biodiverse value with native planting, air purification, sources of nectar and food, and investment value as people are drawn to more natural spaces, and the interest they provide’. A gorgeous example of Green Libraries Week taking root across the whole of the UK!