Skip to main content
Hamburger Menu Close

Advertisement

advertorial Advertorial

article Reuters

At Casual Poet Library, opening in August, every shelf is rented to an individual wanting to loan their books for free. Its founder Rebecca Toh wasn’t sure people would embrace the idealism and “impracticality” of a community-funded library – but she was proven wrong.

article Reuters
New: You can now listen to articles.

This audio is generated by an AI tool.

After working for a decade, freelance photographer Rebecca Toh embarked on a one-year sabbatical earlier this year – and ended up taking on more work. But this time, the Singaporean revisited her childhood dream of owning a bookstore, albeit with a minor adaptation. She decided to build a library.

The Minna no Toshokan Sankaku library in Yaizu city, a small fishing town within the Shizuoka prefecture, functions like a regular library, except for one key detail: Every shelf is rented by an individual who pays a small monthly fee to display their own books for others to loan.

It was opened in March 2020, and more than 50 such libraries have since sprung up across Japan to revitalise local communities.

Source: Reuters/abcd

Advertisement

RECOMMENDED

Advertisement