At its March 19, 2025, meeting, the Glencoe Public Library’s Board of Trustees approved a proposal from Just Cause Consulting to provide strategy and support in financing a library building renovation.
Founded in 2014 and based in Chicago, Just Cause helps nonprofit organizations launch and sustain capital campaigns and fundraising initiatives. It has worked with more than 60 organizations, including recently with Glencoe’s North Shore Congregation Israel.
The library trustees have engaged Just Cause to work with them over seven months in 2025. The renovation project will be funded through a combination of existing library reserves, funds raised through a capital campaign, private donations, a loan, and a March 2026 bond referendum. If the funding for the estimated $17.3 million project is secured, renovations will likely start in late 2026 and be completed in 2028.
“With the help of the professionals at Just Cause, we’re looking forward to engaging the Glencoe community in our exciting renovation plans,” said library board president Roger Parfitt. “The result will be a greatly improved library building that will better meet the community’s needs while retaining its uniquely welcoming atmosphere.”
The Board of Trustees of the Glencoe Public Library invites residents of the community to a public forum on its plans to renovate the library building. The forum will be held in the library’s Johnson Room on Monday, October 14, 7:00-8:30 p.m. Questions will be welcomed.
Speakers will include a trustee of the board and representatives from the Chicago architectural firm of Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill (SOM), which the board has engaged for a master space planning project. SOM was brought on board in April and tasked with creating a coherent vision for addressing known building issues and for the eventual renovation of the library’s interior spaces, grounds, and infrastructure. The master space plan is to be completed by the end of 2024. Incorporating community input, it will prioritize improvements while being sensitive to the historical integrity of the structure and its context within the village. Sustainability will also be a consideration.
The library board selected SOM for its comprehensive services and its interest in bringing a valued public space in line with current and future needs. The firm has designed several libraries, including Chicago’s Chinatown Public Library, the Billie Jean King Main Library in Long Beach, California, and the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University.
“In the board’s 2023 strategic planning process, we learned that Glencoe wants to retain the library’s warm and welcoming character, particularly the beautiful façade on Park Avenue and the vaulted ceiling in the Johnson Room,” said Roger Parfitt, president of the Glencoe Public Library’s Board of Trustees. “Yet residents also want a more modern, comfortable building that meets current needs, including more meeting rooms, an enhanced capacity for community events, better climate control, improved accessibility, better use of the lower level and of our great location on Wyman Green, and necessary updates to the aging building’s mechanical systems.”
“Before the SOM team finalizes their ideas, we need to hear from Glencoe residents. Come join us on October 14, listen to SOM’s suggestions, and provide us with your feedback for a wonderful new version of our library,” he said.
Situated in the heart of downtown Glencoe, the library was built in 1941. Over the years, it has seen several renovations to keep pace with changes in patron use, technology, and emerging service patterns and needs. The last major renovation, completed in 2001, added about 20% more space and featured a new preschool area on the second floor, the Young Adult/Media Room on the main floor, and the Friends of the Glencoe Public Library’s used book room on the lower level.
The program will be recorded and made available through the library’s YouTube channel a day or so after the event.
The Board of the Glencoe Public Library has engaged the Chicago architectural firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM) to create a master space plan for the aging library building. The plan, to be completed by the end of 2024, will create a coherent vision for addressing known building issues and for a potential renovation of the library’s interior spaces, grounds, and infrastructure.
The selection of SOM followed a Request for Qualifications (RFQ) issued on February 26, 2024. Nineteen architectural firms expressed their interest, fifteen submitted responses to the RFQ, and three finalists were interviewed. The Board reached its decision to hire SOM on April 29. Responsible for designing such libraries as Chicago’s Chinatown Public Library, the Billie Jean King Main Library in Long Beach, and the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University, SOM was selected for its comprehensive services and its interest in bringing a valued public space in line with current and future needs.
“At a time when spaces for learning and gathering are rapidly evolving, libraries are more important than ever, and the vibrancy of the Glencoe Public Library demonstrates this perfectly,” says SOM partner and Glencoe resident Adam Semel. “We are proud and honored to partner with Glencoe in charting its future through this master plan.”
With an eye to an eventual renovation of the library, the master space plan will provide the planning, design, and cost estimates for a three-tiered plan that will respond to different budget scenarios:
Community input will be sought at several stages of the planning process. The resulting plan will prioritize improvements while being sensitive to the historical integrity of the structure and its context within the village. Sustainability will also be a consideration.
“We know that Glencoe library patrons like the warm and welcoming ambience of the building as it is now,” says Andrew Kim, executive director of the library. “Any future renovation will preserve historical features that give the building character while adding new functionality and flexibility. We also hope to add a few new favorite features.”
Situated in the heart of downtown Glencoe, the library was built in 1941. Over the years, it has seen several renovations to keep pace with changes in patron use, technology, and emerging service patterns and needs. The last major renovation, completed in 2001, added about 20% more space and featured a new preschool area on the second floor, the Young Adult/Media Room on the main floor, and the Friends of the Glencoe Public Library’s used book room on the lower level.