From Deseret News archives:
Plans unveiled for an LDS library
"This is not intended to be a high-impact facility that will bring a lot of people to the area," LDS Church attorney Alan Sullivan told a gathering of Capitol Hill residents at the neighborhood's community council meeting Wednesday evening.
But several residents said they were worried the reduction in parking would further exacerbate their ongoing problem of small residential streets being clogged with parked cars, especially during the church's semiannual general conferences.
They said the problem has grown dramatically since the LDS Church built its large conference center at the same intersection, directly west of the site for the new library, despite the church's assurances that parking studies had been done. The residents now worry that with the church's plans to renovate the downtown malls in the area, parking will be a nightmare for years to come.
The new library will include general-use reading rooms and a special collections area so church members and visitors can stop by to peruse the church's history. In a news release, Elder Marlin K. Jensen, a member of the First Quorum of the Seventy and the church's historian and recorder, said the library "will be a welcome resource for those who wish to learn more about Latter-day Saint history."
Plans for the building were intended to help it blend in with the look and feel of the intersection, which is just north of the church's Main Street Plaza and the Temple Square plaza. Williams said the design was meant to be a scaled-back, subtle building that will not feel too bulky or overwhelming. He said a three-story glass entry will "act like a lantern to the community."
"We think it will add considerably to the neighborhood," he said.
He said the new facility will have a feel similar to the Main Street Plaza area, with open space and a "pocket park" with "the same kind of character" as Temple Square.
The building was designed by MHTN Architects, a Salt Lake-based firm. Construction will begin in the fall and is expected to be finished in late 2007.
E-mail: dsmeath@desnews.com
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