Markham Public Library


Markham Public Library is a library system operated by the municipal government of the City of Markham in Canada. There are eight branches in the city, serving about 250,000 residents in Markham. The libraries are managed by the Administration Centre, located at 6031 Highway 7.
In 2008, the system was renamed to the singular Markham Public Library to reflect its status as one unified system. Its current Chief Executive Officer is Catherine Biss.

History

While the current library system dates back to the 1970s, there was the subscription based system popular in 19th Century Ontario, the Mechanics’ Institute, operated out of the Old Town Hall on Main Street.

Branches

The Markham Public Library has 8 branches.
The Markham Public Library branches are:
BranchLocationSizeCollectionNotesImage
Aaniin Library14th Avenue and Middlefield Road~Opened in 2018.-
Angus Glen Library3990 Major MacKenzie Drive157,434Built 2003-2005
and has largest collection in Markham.
Cornell Library3201 Bur Oak Avenue100,000Opened in 2012 and has a medical library on second floor. Markham Stouffville Hospital Library open to all user including patients and staff from Markham Stouffville Hospital. Houses Health and Wellness collection.
Markham Village Library6041 Highway 7120,000Built after 1977 when Markham Fair moved from the location. Library re-opened with larger premises 2009; site of the Agricultural Hall rink and original home of the Markham Fairgrounds.
Milliken Mills LibraryUnit 1, 7600 Kennedy Road80,000Opened in 1990 along with .
Thornhill Community Library7755 Bayview Avenue80,000Opened in 1975 along with and renovated in 1989 and 2010.
Thornhill Village Library10 Colborne Street30,000Building built 1851 and library since 1959; last renovated in 1992.
Unionville Library15 Library Lane100,000Opened in 1984 replacing older library and now Old Unionville Library Community Centre.

Customer-Centred Classification

The Markham Village branch was to first to develop its own library classification system called the Customer Centred Classification. Compared to the Dewey Decimal Classification or Library of Congress Classification, C3 is more modern and is supposed to be easier for library patrons to find books at the book stacks. All branches utilize the C3 cataloguing system for their non-fiction collection. The Thornhill Village branch started the migration to C3 in 2009, and C3 is used by the Thornhill Community Centre branch when it re-opened in 2011.

Membership

People who work, live, or attend a school in York Region may apply for a free membership. Otherwise, a $60.00 annual membership fee will apply.

Services

Like many other libraries across Ontario, the Markham Public Library system allows members to check out books and other physical and online media. Members can:

Other services

Other than borrowing books and media, the following services are available: