Tuesday, 24 December 2013

Library inauguration




Shri Sharad Pawar, Chairman, Nehru Centre inaugurating the new library by lighting the traditional lamp. Also seen in the picture are Shri I. M. Kadri, General Secretary and Smt. Bakul Patel, Jt. Secretary and Prof. S. M. Chitre, Member, Executive Committee, Nehru Centre.



Shri Satish Sahney, Chief Executive, Nehru Centre welcoming the guests at the inaugural ceremony of the new library. Seen on the dais are Shri I. M. Kadri, General Secretary; Shri Sharad Pawar, Chairman and Smt. Bakul Patel, Jt. Secretary, Nehru Centre (L to R)



Shri I. M. Kadri, General Secretary addressing the guests at the inaugural function of the new library. Seen on the dais are Shri Sharad Pawar, Chairman and Smt. Bakul Patel, Jt. Secretary, Nehru Centre.


Monday, 23 December 2013

Nehru Centre Library



Library entrance


Cubicles for researchers

                  

   View from the glass windows


Storage racks


Landscaped Area


Landscaped Area


Landscaped Area


Computer workstations


Journal racks with Mumbai 'Open Spaces' map in the background.


A bird's eyeview of the reading room.

Wednesday, 18 December 2013

SHELF LIFE


Mid-day





The Nehru Centre Library relocated to the Discovery Of India building last month. The 36- year- old library, today, boasts of a collection of 25,000 books, documents, journals and papers.PHORUM DALAL spends an afternoon sifting through the shelves while quizzing the librarian, ARATI DESAI

THE BEST bus number 84 stops outside the Nehru Centre on a hot, windless afternoon. The driver hits the brakes nonchalantly as the conductor announces the stop in much boredom.But, there’s a flutter in my heart as I walk up to the Discovery of India building. Wide marbled stairs lead me to the first- floor landing and the smell of fresh paint further intoxicates my excitement.

An assignment to ‘ check out’ a new reading space is any bookworm’s dream job. I push the glass door and a smiling clerk ushers me into librarian Arati Desai’s new cabin. The Nehru Centre Library, founded in 1977, was crammed in the basement of Nehru Planetarium in a mere 5,000 square feet area since 1991, has moved in to an area of 10,000 square feet last month.

For a moment, my mind races back to my school library, which we frequented minutes before the first bell rang for the morning prayers, all of the 15 minutes of the short break and most of the lunch break and after the last bell rang to mark the end of day. Enid Blyton’s characters — Georgina from Mallory Towers , Fatty from Five Findouters and Moonface and Saucepan Man from The Faraway Tree — resurrect in my mind space.

The articulate and sprightly voice of Desai brings me back to reality and we delve deep into a conversation about the library’s origin and the role of a librarian in the tech- savvy world. “ It’s true people don’t frequent libraries, but does that mean that a librarian should stop working?” questions Desai. She quotes SR Ranganathan, who is considered the father of library science in India. “ He described the library as a growing organism. It must continue to grow,’ he said.

” Desai wants to reach out to the reader in the right way, and has plans to come out with a newsletter that highlights rare books in the collection, new collections and interesting books to draw more readers into the new space. “ The entire catalogue is available online to the reader but to read, he must walk in,” assures Desai.

Technology has, in fact, stretched the role of a librarian. “ There is so much to do,” says Desai “ I am an information freak. Every morning I go through all the newspapers and magazines for interesting articles that can be documented.” The library uses the ‘ alpha numeric’ system of cataloguing. In addition to the books and journal articles which are already on the catalogue, the library has a huge collection of about 1,50,000 newspaper clippings which are organised by using an alpha numeric system. Desai hands me a file, which contains a list of subjects that are used to classify and categorise the newspaper clippings.



Librarian Arati Desai has been working at the Nehru Centre Library since 2000. The seating area at the new location is stylesh and well-lit with luxurious seating. In short, a reader's paradise. PIC/BIPIN KOKATE



Reading time LIFE

Interestingly, the total length of the book shelves is 6115 feet that is around two kilometres in length! 

A guided tour with Desai hints the mammoth task she undertakes along with her staff of five.
The library has a vast Indian and world history section, philosophy, psychology and literature section and an extensive Jawaharlal Nehru, Mahatma Gandhi and Indira Gandhi collection. But the largest attraction is the astronomy and science section. The library contains rare books in every section. “ You just have to spot the publishing date to recognise one,” she says.

At the end of the tour, she wishes me ‘ happy reading’ and leaves me on the mezzanine floor with endless racks filled with books. “ Does this section have CCTV cameras?” I blurt out. “ No, but hand me your bag. I will deposit it at the exit,” she grins.

I start with the arts rack and pick The Postimpressionist by Belinda Thomson. The first chapter discusses the term post- impressionists. It was Roger Fly, an English artist, who, faced with the difficulty of presenting a haphazard exhibition of continental arts to an inexperienced English art clients titled the exhibition Manet and the The Post- impressionists. Strangely, George Seuret, Vincent Van Gogh, Paul Gaughin and Paul Cezanne were dead when the word was coined in 1910. I move on to Paul Sarte’s La Nausée, where he writes about the non- existence of adventure: “ Adventures are stories and one does not live a story. One can tell it later, one can only see it from the outside.” I know I must come back for more of his philosophy.

I end my tour with the opening paragraph of Roald Dahl’s Going Solo : “ A life is made up of a great number of small incidents and a small number of great ones.” To add to that, spending time in a library surely makes it to the latter.

phorum. dalal@ mid- day. com

Tuesday, 17 December 2013

Here today, more tomorrow

Business Standard

       
           OVERLEAF










             


Rrishi Raote | New Delhi  November 22, 2013

Early in the post-Clinton era, I asked a librarian at the American Center in Mumbai why the number of books on the library shelves was shrinking. "Young man," this stupid person said with a knowledgeable air, "everything is online now. Sit with me and I'll tell you how to research on the Web."

Gee, call a fig leaf a fig leaf, I thought angrily. The dotcom bubble had burst and the American budget was tight, acquisitions had slowed to a trickle - but why should a librarian fool herself? I wasn't a schoolboy, and Google was still a baby.

But the rot ran deep. The word "library" was gone from the name: the place was now an "information resource centre". Yuck!

All too soon, of course, nobody needed the-place-once-formerly-known-as-a-library for access to the Internet. Judging by what I saw, people-traffic in the American library in Delhi fell in the mid-2000s. Instead of the buzz of borrowers of the mid-1990s there were nodding oldies and youngsters on AC study time. I believe the library eventually cut back on computers and put in more reading tables, but I haven't been there for years.

A public library, because it contains culture - not just the culture of the moment but a slice through the history of culture - should change wisely and not in a hurry. The American Center libraries plainly aimed to be responsive, which is good, but they were precipitate, which dated them too quickly.

Another public library is setting an example of change done right - not frantic and wholesale but focused, organic and for the long term. On November 14, Nehru's 125th birth anniversary, the Nehru Centre Library in Mumbai reopened after a speedy renovation. It has shifted into more spacious premises in Worli from its last home in the basement of the Nehru Planetarium. And it is using the new space well, with room for thrice as many books as it currently owns.

This library does not lend. It is free and open to all, as a reference library. Its 30,000 holdings include non-fiction books, bound periodicals, and a news archive. It is also closed-access, which means that you or I cannot visit the shelves - we have to ask the staff to bring books out to us.

Here is an example of thoughtfulness: "Because we are a closed-access library," says Librarian-cum-Documentation Officer Arati Desai, "we must give readers the most information we can in our catalogue." In the catalogue, accessible online, each entry has full publication data and subject tags - and a terrific feature called "shelf browse". Click, and you can see what books are shelved near the one you are looking at. This is one way to reproduce the experience of actual shelf browsing.

Hardly any library website in the world has this tool. The best shelf browse is probably Harvard University's StackLife, but then Harvard's software wasn't picked up off the shelf. And the Nehru Centre catalogue will improve over time.

Another example: a decade ago, Desai took note of patrons asking for news articles on particular topics, like the Indian Ocean tsunami. So the librarians set to work sorting cuttings under 200 different subject heads - invaluable for a period when many publications lacked websites and e-archives.

In the new catalogue, three sets of keywords will join together - book subject keywords, keywords for bound volumes, and "documentation" (or news cuttings) keywords - to make a common list of 5,000 keywords. One search, across all platforms.

A third example: seeing a lack of library resources on South Asian countries in Mumbai, Desai will focus acquisitions in that area. Why? Because there is a need.

Such measures represent a lot of hard human work for the four-member staff. They run a middle-sized institution with a mostly local (and some research) user base - and yet they are laying a foundation for a much bigger future. This library is built to last.

rraote@yahoo.com


Thursday, 12 December 2013

Books and Bliss!

Afternoon Despatch & Courier


Books and Bliss!
The Nehru Centre’s brand new library premises on the first floor of its Discovery of India building is already making waves, as people discover the sheer delight of five-star comfort amid the bookstacks. The ADC’s Vishwanath Salian was there and came away maha impressed.



Architect I M Kadri shows you how to navigate to best effect among the periodicals on offer. Behind him stands librarian and documentation officer Arati Desai.


"Meet you in the library lobby at the Nehru Centre" looks set to becoming a mantra, a green one at that !


The ambience is great, the atmosphere conducive to reading.


It's all available - computers and the internet, audio and video, and digitised cataloguing, make content browsing a complete experience.




Out of the basement into a more visible location, the Nehru Centre's 25,000 volumes have been serving the city for decades. And the range has only increased over the years to suit both scholars and the book lover.


And so to the egress (or the entrance) depending upon whether one is coming or going.



Impossible to by-pass, people who come to see the Discovery of India exposition on the ground floor, are invariably drawn to the lovely reading areas on the first floor.

http://www.afternoondc.in/photo-gallery/books-and-bliss/album_156

The new Nehru Centre library

Afternoon Despatch & Courier




Friday, November 15, 2013

The new Nehru Centre library, inaugurated yesterday by Union minister for agriculture Sharad Pawar, hosts more than 25,000 books on a range of subjects and includes encyclopedias and special collections of the writings of Pandit Jawharlal Nehru and Mahatma Gandhi. This is the latest addition to the upgrades that have taken place since 1977, when the library began with a modest collection of 2,500 books on Indology meant for researchers. Today the library offers a range of up-to-date services in addition to books - a cybercentre, audio visual archives, documentation services, daily indexed articles, scientific journals and of course, magazines and periodicals. The picture shows (from left) Bakul Patel, joint secretary, Nehru Centre, with Sharad Pawar.

Tuesday, 10 December 2013

Revamped Nehru Centre library to open today

The Indian Express





Mihika Basu Posted online: Thu Nov 14 2013, 03:25 hrs

Mumbai : From a small in-house library at Sterling Centre to a 5,000-sq ft one at the Nehru Planetarium, the Nehru Centre library, perhaps the only reference library open to all in the city, has got a swanky makeover. With 20,000 books, 75 journals, 220 documentation subjects, an audio visual centre and a coffee table corner, the library is being shifted to the Discovery of India building in Worli and will be spread over a 10,000 sq ft area. It will open to the public on Thursday, marking the 125th birth anniversary of Jawaharlal Nehru. The idea is to make the reading area a lively and attractive space for adults and children.

 “In 1977, the library was started as a small in-house facility, which functioned as a research centre for the upcoming Discovery of India exposition and the planetarium. It was subsequently housed in the basement of the Nehru Planetarium. Perhaps with increased digitisation, internet boom and lack of interest in going to an ordinary library, fewer people were visiting the library. People now want to go to places where they can sit and relax in a comfortable ambience, pick up their favourite book or magazine or browse the internet. We have addressed these aspects in the new library,” said librarian Arati Desai.

With meticulous planning over the past six months regarding structural, sound, aesthetics and fire protection issues, 30 contractors working under the guidance architect I M Kadri, it will be a hybrid library with both print and digital information resources.

It will have a capacity to stock 50,000-80,000 books. The new facilities include four independent cubicles for research scholars, a cyber-centre with six independent work stations, multi-media viewing and listening services, audio-visual stations and a digitised catalogue.

Unlike other libraries, readers will be able to browse the library shelves online, check the books in a particular shelf and see a snapshot of the books. The reading area will be well-lit, with a massive map of the waterfront of Mumbai and an artificial landscaped green area.

The library currently stocks books of all genres, bound volumes and newspaper articles. It plans to gradually add more books, magazines and journals. This will also include books in other languages. No fees will be charged for reading the books.

“Since the library was earlier in the basement, it didn’t have much visibility. The idea was to make it a one-stop resource centre. In the evenings, we plan to use the reading space for book launches. After all, a library is an ideal place for such events and not a bookshop,” said Desai.

mihika.basu@expressindia.com

Friday, 6 December 2013

One Day Workshop on Public Library Automation: Changing trends


One Day workshop on library automation for public libraries is organized with joint efforts of Nehru Centre Library and Libserve Solutions to create awareness about current trends and practices in library software as well as issues for consideration in pre and post automation process. Seats are limited. Participants will be selected on the basis of first come first. Program is free for Public Library Professionals and working staff



एकदिवसीय कार्यशाळा-सार्वजनिक ग्रंथालयातील संगणकीकरण
: बदलते प्रवाह 

सार्वजनिक ग्रंथालयातील संगणकीकरणावर नेहरू सेंटर ग्रंथालय आणि लिबसर्व्ह
सोल्युशन्स यांच्यातर्फे एकदिवसीय कार्यशाळा आयोजित करण्यात आली आहे. ग्रंथालय संगणकीकरणाबाबत बदलते प्रवाह,पद्धती आणि संगणकप्रणालींविषयी  प्रत्यक्ष माहिती या कार्यशाळेत दिली जाईल. जागा मर्यादित असल्याने प्रथम येईल त्यास प्राधान्य या तत्वावर प्रवेश दिला जाईल. सार्वजनिक ग्रंथालयातील ग्रंथपाल आणि अन्य सहकाऱ्यांना हा कार्यक्रम विनाशुल्क आहे.


Venue: 
'Who Are We' Hall, 
Nehru Centre Library,
1 st Floor, Nehru Centre,
Dr. Annie Besant Road, 
Worli, Mumbai - 400018


Date: 
20th January,2014