ARCHITECTURE DESIGN CONCEPT
Maplewood Memorial Library, 51 Baker Street, Maplewood, New Jersey
Designed by Sage and Coombe Architects
The newly reimagined Maplewood Memorial Library is a 32,000-square-foot, all-electric, community-first civic space that is 33% larger than before and features the addition of a second floor. The library will be the first LEED Gold-certified library in New Jersey. It is built within the library’s historic footprint, a renovation and significant expansion that respects the past while boldly embracing the future. This $24 million project was made possible through a mix of state, local and private funding. The state contributed $8.3 million through the Library Construction Bond Act, and the municipality contributed $12 million, more than satisfying the 50% match requirement. In addition, the Maplewood Library Foundation raised more than $2 million from donors.
Main entrance on Baker Street
View from above The Forum
Design That Reflects Community Values
Rooted in equity and transparency, the building welcomes all through a restored 1955 entrance that visually links Baker Street to Maplewood Memorial Park designed by the Olmsted firm. On the park side, a wide, elevated ramp ensures equal access for all — no stairs, no separate entries. The building reflects a “civic choice” in every element.
Active and Inclusive Public Space
The design promotes active engagement, featuring light-filled stairways, open circulation, and visual energy. Inside and out, the library encourages movement, exploration, and discovery. The space is “built for books,” with reading nooks, ash wood floors resembling rough-cut pages, and windows that open like the leaves of a good book. A fully-glazed second floor reading room overlooks the Park with a frit that both limits solar gain and protects the birds — depicting local flora and fauna.
Indoor/Outdoor Harmony
Reading patio facing Maplewood Memorial Park
An outdoor reading terrace with Adirondack chairs, second-floor views, and seating along glass walls blur the line between inside and out, making the library feel like a treehouse — especially for birdwatchers. This corrects past designs that walled off the park, enhancing the building’s role as part of a larger civic landscape.
Flexible, Purpose-Built Spaces
● Teen Room with floor-to-ceiling windows is a sanctuary just for teens with commanding views of the park
● Children’s Room celebrates early learning with
a layout that invites discovery
● Community Room with 200-person capacity and a separate entrance, it operates independently after hours — illuminating the community
● Maker Space empowering hands-on learning with 3D printers and work benches, all in a room with state-of-the-art air filtration
● Local History Room with historic Maplewood resources and boardroom seating
● Nesting over the community room, a run of stepped seating connects the first and second floors — the Forum — a flexible, energizing space for informal events and collaboration
● Ten Quiet Study Rooms for individuals that can be reserved by small groups looking for private space to read, study and work
Sustainable + Resilient
Solar panels offset 58% of energy use; mechanicals are elevated to avoid flood damage; planted roofs manage stormwater. Materials from the original structure were preserved wherever possible. Windows are bird-safe, and native landscaping supports biodiversity.
A Library Like No Other
From wooden trusses honoring original architecture to the signature windows framing views to the park like a living painting, this couldn’t be anything other than a library. Every inch is purpose-built, community-centered, and future-ready.
Media Contact:
Rosemary Ostmann
RoseComm for the Maplewood Memorial Library
rostmann@rosecomm.com
201-615-7751