NOTICE: The Eastwood Branch will be closed on April 29th & 30th for maintenance needs. 

Notice of Public Meeting: Kalamazoo Public Library Board of Trustees | April 22nd| 5 pm | Central Library/Van Deusen Room. The packet of information for the meeting can be found on the library’s website

See the latest updates about Alma Powell Branch.

EAS History

Serving Eastwood Since 1910


The first Kalamazoo Public Library branch dedicated to serving the east side of the city opened in February 1910 in the original East Avenue School building. Due to increasing usage over the years, the branch moved in August 1940 to a storefront location further up the street, at 1719 East Main St., next to Triestram’s City Drug Store.


Exterior and interior of the first East Branch in old East Avenue School, about 1927 Kalamazooo Public Library Archives, uncataloged.

The “Buchwagen”

Among the services provided from that branch in the early 1970s was the “buchwagen.” This mini-bookmobile was actually the book-laden Volkswagen of then-librarian Lorna Chapman. She and an assistant drove through the streets of the east and north sides of the city, tooting their horn and playing rock music until they encountered a gathering of children.

They would stop, sometimes read to the children, and allow them to choose books from the back of the “buchwagen.” A week later, they would return to the same location to pick up the books and provide others. It was part of Chapman’s philosophy of librarianship to take books directly to children who might never venture into the library on their own.


East Branch Library, E. Main St., 1972. Kalamazoo Gazette, photographed by Robert Maxwell, in Kalamazoo Public Library Archives, uncataloged.

The Eastwood Branch

In 1974 the Eastwood Community Club donated its former community center on Gayle Avenue, known as John Strand Hall, to the library for a new branch. Since remodeling would have been more expensive than building a new branch, Strand Hall was demolished, and a modest new building was built on that site.

The branch had moved from the city’s Eastside to Kalamazoo Township’s Eastwood neighborhood, so it became known as the Eastwood Branch at that time. Service began there on July 10, 1975.

The Community Club marked its 60th anniversary in 1981 by purchasing additional lots adjacent to the building to provide for parking and future expansion for the branch. Fifteen years later, when that building, too, had proven inadequate for the needs of the community, their foresight came to fruition. A millage was passed to refurbish or rebuild all five of the library’s facilities.


1996 Re-opening

Another new building was constructed on the Gayle Avenue site, designed by David Milling and Associates of Ann Arbor and built by A.J. Etkin Construction Company. The grand re-opening was held in August of 1996. Residential in scale and detailing, the new branch represents the idealized model of a small neighborhood library. The staff manages services easily in its classic L-shape. The bottom of the L features the children’s area and enclosed story room; the stem holds the adult and audiovisual collections. A vestibule elevator and stairwell lead to a community meeting room on the lower level.

Prismatic Lantern, Eastwood Branch Library, 2005 Photo: Keith Howard.

A cupola skylight and iridescent entry glazing dramatize the rose brick exterior. Michael Hayden’s sculpture, Prismatic Lantern, hangs below the skylight. Holographic film paints the circulation area with ever-changing rainbows. Cheerful colors delight the eye in interior finishes and furnishings.

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