DULUTH — Duluth's ore boat-like modernist library, one of the first buildings seen driving into downtown from the south, is slated for a major makeover.
Duluth Mayor Emily Larson laid out plans Wednesday that could culminate in either a renovation of the 43-year-old gray structure or a new building in the block-long space.
"We are open to all of it," she said in a news conference.
The City Council will vote on measures this week that include paying for half of community engagement and pre-design work and contracts with businesses to carry those efforts out. The Duluth Library Foundation has volunteered the other half of those costs, at $150,000.
A key aspect to the redesign would be shifting the city's workforce development program to the library, making the building more multi-purpose. The move opens new state and federal funding avenues to the city, along with bolstering staff and space.
"With this project, Duluth is joining a national trend expanding what a library can do," said workforce development director Elena Foshay.
Locating the workforce program in a "trusted space" like the library would make it more accessible, offer more meeting rooms, access to toys and books for families who use its services and a combined computer lab with more staff, she said, allowing them to reach more people who need employment services.
The city has talked about updating or replacing its downtown library for nearly a decade.