Historic Restoration Project

Wright Memorial Public Library celebrated the completion a $500,000 restoration and renovation project with a ribbon cutting at the Library Friday, Aug. 10, 2018.
 
See the difference, before and after.


Library Director Kristi Hale thanked the project funders and all involved with the project for bringing the Jack W. and Sally D. Eichelberger Historic Restoration to fruition.

 


“This project has been a labor of love for us here at Wright Library, and we are so excited to share these beautiful spaces with the community,” Hale said.
 

Renovation FAQ
Plans by LWC

2018 Renovation Project Press

Recent Facility Projects

Tree maintenance
Lower Level Repair
Decorative exterior lighting
Refurbished children's room

The recently completed $500,000 historic restoration and renovation included:
  • Restoration of the historic front reading rooms and foyer with new light fixtures appropriate to the architecture, refinished original furnishings and woodwork, additional furnishings, convenient power access, and new carpet.
  • Construction of a small conference room on the main level, equipped with technology for collaborative projects.
  • Construction of a central customer service desk, improved flooring, electrical, mechanical and structural systems, and redesigned staff work areas.
 
The project was funded by a $250,000 gift from The Jack W and Sally D. Eichelberger Foundation of the Dayton Foundation; gifts from the estates of two long-time patrons: inventor, aeronautical engineer, and author William R. Winslow, and Dr. Gerald E. Meyer; and $70,000 from the Library's capital fund. A grant for a custom stained glass window was donated by the Wright Memorial Public Library Foundation. The window, by local artist Janet Strauss, was installed in the North Reading Room.
 
“We are incredibly grateful for these gifts. Our vision for the project was to bring this historic building back to the full beauty of 1939 while updating it to meet the needs of 21st century library users. Through the generosity of the Eichelberger Foundation and the gifts of Mr. Winslow and Dr. Meyer, we have achieved those goals with very little use of public funds.”

Wright Library’s administration is committed to preserving the building’s unique character. The building, which is a listed on the National Register of Historic Places, features Tudor architecture, vaulted ceilings, Globe Wernicke book shelves, and stained glass windows.

The Library was nominated to the Historic Register in 2013 for its architectural distinction as an excellent example of a Tudor or Jacobethan Revival style library, designed by the local Dayton, Ohio, architecture firm of Schenck and Williams. Schenck and Williams were responsible for the designs of much of the civic architecture in Oakwood.
 
The project’s priorities were influenced by community feedback drawn from a multi-phased research process in 2016. Preserving the building’s history and architecture, making necessary repairs and updates, and enhancing the facility’s functionality emerged as key findings in the study.
 
The Library’s Board of Trustees selected local architects LWC Inc. and Arcanum-based Arcon Builders to complete the work.