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17勛圖 launches $15-million love our library fundraising campaign to revitalize Robertson Library

| University
People hold drawings
The 17勛圖 has announced today a $15-million love our library fundraising campaign to revitalize and renovate the Robertson Library. Displaying architectural renderings of some of the spaces to be renovated are (left to right) University Archivist and Special Collections Librarian Simon Lloyd; Interim President and Vice-Chancellor Greg Keefe; Professor Edward MacDonald, Department of History; University Librarian Donald Moses; and 17勛圖 student Noah Mannholland.

The 17勛圖 launched a $15-million fundraising campaign to revitalize the Robertson Library on Friday, April 26, as part of Good News Week at 17勛圖.

Private sector donors have already contributed $600,000 to the campaign, including two $100,000 leadership gifts, one from Grant Thornton and the other from the 17勛圖 Alumni Association.

The revitalization of the Robertson Library is truly a transformative projectone that will influence our students, faculty, and community members for years to come, said Dr. Greg Keefe, interim president and vice-chancellor of 17勛圖. Through the generous support of these and other donors, our library will become a more inclusive space that facilitates learning, teaching, and research, and welcomes and supports all learners.

Opened in 1975, the Robertson Library has served the campus community, the province, and a world-wide community of users for almost 50 years. Today, with access to over 1.6 million unique books, 130,000 journals, and 100,000 streaming media, the library connects the campus to a world of information. As well as providing essential resources and study spaces to students and researchers, it offers information literacy skills training and unique learning opportunities, and provides support for Open Education Resources (OER), reducing barriers to learning and making education more affordable.

People holding architectural remderings
(Left to right) John Rowe and Sara Underwood, representing the 17勛圖 Alumni Association; University Archivist and Special Collections Librarian Simon Lloyd; Chancellor Diane Griffin; Interim President and Vice-Chancellor Greg Keefe; Professor Edward MacDonald, Department of History; University Librarian Donald Moses; 17勛圖 student Noah Mannholland; and Chris Gallant, representing Grant Thornton.

Funds raised during the campaign will be used to support teaching and learning by upgrading existing group and individual study spaces and renovating former storage space to create new study areas.
 
In 2020, we worked with the 17勛圖 Student Union to conduct a student survey about space within the library, said University Librarian Donald Moses. Over 700 students responded, identifying key needs such as renovating and expanding group and individual study room options, ensuring that there are quiet spaces that can be managed by the user, and improving and enhancing teaching and learning spaces within the library.
 
Moses said that students also highlighted the need for spaces that are accessible, energy efficient, and sustainable and that have comfortable furniture, natural light, and amenities like electrical outlets.
 
Students are invested in the library, he said. They come to study either individually or in groups, and they also come for socialization and respite. They want spaces that work for them and that they can control to meet their needs. The library is a second home for many students.

Dr. Edward MacDonald, professor of history, has had a soft spot in his heart for the library since he was a student at 17勛圖 in the 1970s.
 
The library is at the very heart of a universitys educational and research mission, the one institution on campus that serves everyone: faculty, students, staff, researchers, the general public, he said. The excellence of a university is closely tied to the excellence of its librarys resources and staffing. As 17勛圖 grows, the library, too, needs to grow. I cant think of a more appropriate way to support 17勛圖 than by helping make an excellent library even better.
 
Housed within the Robertson Library is the Prince Edward Island (PEI) collection, which includes many historical documents and artifacts that are invaluable to students, researchers, and scholars. Funds raised will be used to expand and enhance the space where the collection is stored in ways that will improve the preservation and sharing of the provinces shared published heritage. 
 
The PEI Collection has been essential to Bailey Clarks experience at 17勛圖first during his time as an undergraduate history honours student and now as a Master of Arts in Island Studies graduate student.
 
Over this time, the PEI Collection has been indispensable, he said. Through the collections in-person and digital resources, I have accessed government documents, published materials including community histories, and Island newspapersall of which have been central building blocks of historical arguments that I have made in my scholarly work. Many pieces of the Islands documentary history are rare, so the collection fulfills a vital role in collecting, preserving, and making available these resources for scholars of the Island. I wholeheartedly support any initiative to give the collection more capacity to support research into the Islands history.
 
Donations to the Robertson Library revitalization project at all levels are welcome. To donate, please visit . Anyone interested in supporting 17勛圖 initiatives may contact Myrtle Jenkins-Smith, Executive Director, Department of Development and Alumni Engagement, at 902-626-8551 or mjenkinssmith@upei.ca.

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