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Through our partnerships, we empower libraries to reach the communities that need them the most. Sustainably bridging service gaps requires more than just provisioning resources or building new library branches. Effective engagement changes the dynamic between anchor institutions and the communities they serve, creating buy-in and a sense of belonging – and allowing previously underserved people to become stakeholders.
LWB US builds custom strategies with libraries that meet a local need and leverage existing assets. Our collaboration with libraries includes needs assessment and asset mapping; deep canvassing and community engagement; project design and implementation; staff training; evaluation; and strategies to convert visitors to pop-up projects into consistent library patrons.
For years, Libraries Without Borders US has partnered with local libraries and small business owners to transform laundromats into connected places of learning and community. By engaging families at the laundromat, we make library services accessible for people with challenging work and childcare schedules who can’t visit their local public library during opening hours.
Since 2014, we have partnered with public libraries and community organizations to design and install laundromat libraries in eight states and the District of Columbia. We have turned the laundromat into a place where customers can connect to resources to help find a job, get legal assistance, or get a broadband connection at home.
In collaboration with communities and laundromats across the country, LWB US has created a toolkit for anyone to replicate the success of the laundromat library in their community. To view this toolkit, click here.
Our “Laundry & Literacy Kit,” packed with educational materials, is designed to create playful, literacy-rich spaces for young children and families in the laundromat environment. In 2018, a two-phase pilot experimental study of New York laundromats equipped with the kit produced amazing results. New York University researchers found that those laundromats were a critical incubator of early literacy: children were 30 times more likely to engage in literacy activities than in other laundromats; parents were significantly more likely to engage in family learning and literacy activities; and everyone praised the connected, literacy spaces made available in local laundromats. Read the full Impact Report here.
We have created Wash and Learn Initiative sites in the following locations:
Since 2018, LWB US has worked in the city of Loíza, a major center of Afro-Puerto Rican culture on the island. But the municipality faces many challenges, with a median household income of $17,000 annually and one of the highest violent crime rates on the island. It is geographically isolated, accessible only by low-lying bridges that easily flood. Loíza was devastated by Hurricane Maria in 2018 and many public services damaged by the storm have not reopened. Further, nearly 30% of residents don’t have any type of home internet connection.