The little Free Library in Coburg is along the Upfield bike track between Reynard Street and Moreland Station. It is a very well done; a neat little red school house style with a pitched roof and glass doors
The setting is completed with a matching red seat, a sign and a small garden, wedged in between a fence and the bicycle track. Guerrilla street architecture is practical way to help the whole community; public seating may be a useful as free books.
The sign reads: Little Free Library – Borrow, donate or exchange – Have fun – In memory of David J. Cumming – “Uncle Dicky”
I’ve no idea who David J. Cumming was but the little library is fun tribute to his memory.
The collective noun for books is a ‘library’ and, although the Little Free Library is not a circulating library that circulates its collection by lending books, nor a research library that holds a collection, it is still a library. It is a street distribution/exchange library, that informally distributes books between people privately without records. Imagine encountering a free library a couple hundred of years ago, or in a totalitarian regime, an anarchic intellectual paradise.
It is an interesting cultural note that books are becoming increasingly difficult to sell new or old. New forms of book swapping are emerging: Book Crossing, Book Mooch and Little Free Libraries. http://www.bookcrossing.com http://bookmooch.com http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_swapping
According to Little Free Library Map there are also ones in Seddon, Kingsville and Hawthorn, and Thornbury. I didn’t find the one that was, according to the map, on Kendall Street in Thornbury near the Merri Creek. I wasn’t surprised, I’m sure that some come and go without being recorded, like many things on the street. http://littlefreelibrary.org/ourmap/
January 5th, 2015 at 9:28 AM
Hi Mark,
West Preston / Thornbury – Check out the front garden of 62 Kendall St – a bright yellow 4-drawer filing cabinet on its side. That’s where I first saw a little free library and got the idea. I pursued the idea further via the website little free library.org.
Others I’ve seen or are aware of around Melbourne are:
– Westgarth – approx 400m east of the station – near a pedestrian crossing over the railway.
– Somerville Rd Yarraville
– Melbourne Central – 2nd floor – behind the clock
I’ve started a list of these in the back of the log book at the Coburg little free library.
Bob Cumming
Coburg Little Free Library Host
January 5th, 2015 at 10:23 AM
Thanks Bob for the additional information I must check out the other free libraries and thanks your work with Coburg’s little free library. Cheers.
July 13th, 2018 at 9:57 AM
[…] stations, more around the streets and even one at Barkley Square shopping centre. I first noticed a free library in my neighbourhood in 2014 but the recent growth in them is a sure indicator of peak […]
September 2nd, 2018 at 3:32 PM
[…] just a small, red wooden cupboard full of free books and a red garden bench by the railway fence. Uncle Dickey’s library was the first of Coburg’s free libraries starting in 2014 a little further along the line before […]