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As much a playground as a place for reading books, redesigned children’s library creates a blueprint for making others in Hong Kong just as welcoming

  • Architects turn a cramped and ‘boring’ children’s library in Aberdeen, Hong Kong, into a stimulating place with space for reading and playing
  • Libraries are social centres and need to be more than repositories for books, say the pair, who have been tasked with redesigning other libraries in the city

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The redesigned children’s section of the library in Aberdeen, Hong Kong, with colourful, movable shelves in a variety of shapes and tunnels for children to explore. Photo: Tugo Cheng Photography

What if libraries were fun?

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That’s the question that came to mind when Howard Chung and Irene Cheng of Hong Kong architectural practice HIR Studio were asked by the government’s Leisure and Cultural Services Department (LCSD) to renovate the children’s section of Aberdeen Public Library.

Like many of Hong Kong’s libraries, the facility in Aberdeen on the south side of Hong Kong Island was a cramped, fluorescent-lit space inside a municipal services building, which it shares with a wet market, a sports centre and other community facilities.

“The spaces were quite boring and a bit dark,” says Chung.

The entrance of the HIR Studio-designed children’s section of Aberdeen Public Library. Photo: Tugo Cheng Photography
The entrance of the HIR Studio-designed children’s section of Aberdeen Public Library. Photo: Tugo Cheng Photography

The LCSD was well aware of this. Nearly three years ago, it invited young designers to come up with ideas to make Hong Kong’s libraries more comfortable and appealing to the public.

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