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University City Regional

5528 Waters Edge Village Drive
Charlotte, NC 28262
United States

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 Get Directions
Contact us:
(704) 416-7200
Hours:
Sunday Closed
Monday 9:00 am-8:00 pm
Tuesday 9:00 am-8:00 pm
Wednesday 9:00 am-8:00 pm
Thursday 9:00 am-8:00 pm
Friday 9:00 am-5:00 pm
Saturday 9:00 am-5:00 pm
After Hours Book Drop | Available

What We Offer

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Get To Know University City Regional
New University City Regional Library Project

Located at 301 East W.T. Harris Boulevard, University City Regional Library serves northeast Charlotte and one of the fasted growing areas for business, healthcare, and academia in Mecklenburg County – University City. This library first opened its doors to the public on February 14, 1993. In 1999, to accommodate rapid community growth, the library closed for five months to expand the facility to nearly 25,000 square feet – making it 60% larger than its original size. The University City Regional Library is one of the most visited libraries in the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library system. The new facility will be located less than a mile from the current facility on Waters Edge Village Drive, in the new Waters Edge development along JW Clay Boulevard.

 

 
Fast Facts
  • Will be largest regional library in Mecklenburg County except for the Uptown Library campus (comprised of Main Library and ImaginOn: the Joe and Joan Martin Center)
  • Outfitted with generous spaces, including:
    • Dedicated children’s and teen program areas,
    • Large community room and flexible meeting spaces,
    • Comfortable individual and group-size reading/study spaces
  • Designed to handle needs of a large regional library and programs of all types
  • New and ample technology
  • Less than a half-mile from the LYNX Blue Line JW Clay Station
  • The anticipated completion time for this project is 2025

 

 
New Facility FAQ
  • What will parking look like at the new facility?
    • There will be ample parking adjacent to the Library.
  • Will there be multiple entrances to the new facility for easy accessibility?
    • There will be one primary public entrance to the Library. The entire facility will be ADA compliant, including the entrance and all emergency exits.
  • Will there be access to the facility from the Greenway?
    • The new Library will be within a short walk of the entrance of the Barton Creek Greenway at JW Clay Boulevard.
  • Will trees that have been removed for this project be replaced?
    • The project will be compliant with the City of Charlotte’s tree ordinance
  • Will there be a Makerspace in the new facility?
    • There will not be a Makerspace in the new Library. The facility will, however, be designed to have more flexibility with its rooms so there is a capability to bring in Makerspace equipment when needed.
  • Are shelves going to be shorter/more accessible for all?
    • Shelving in the open floor area will be no taller than 66 inches to allow for more natural light and better views throughout the facility.
  • What will determine the materials the new facility receives?
    • The Library will have a large collection of materials based on the circulation history of University City Regional Library, meaning that the branch’s needs will be kept in mind when distributing materials.
    • Much of the opening day collection will be new to the system and selected specifically for the University City community.
    • CML has a floating collection where materials are not housed permanently at one specific library, but instead are shelved in the library where they were most recently returned. It also transports reserved materials to the customer’s library of choice when it becomes available.
    • CML’s Materials Management department ensures that the system has a diverse, well-balanced collection to meet the needs of customers. They analyze circulation information and monitor new material trends for each location and acquire materials to meet those needs.

 

 

 

Branch Manager

West Boulevard Library

2157 West Boulevard
Charlotte, NC 28208
United States

Get Directions
 Get Directions
Contact us:
(704) 416-7400
Hours:
Sunday Closed
Monday 9:00 am-8:00 pm
Tuesday 9:00 am-8:00 pm
Wednesday 9:00 am-8:00 pm
Thursday 9:00 am-8:00 pm
Friday 9:00 am-5:00 pm
Saturday 9:00 am-5:00 pm
After Hours Book Drop | Available

What We Offer

View Branch Events

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Get To Know West Boulevard Library

Branch Manager

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Ancestry Library Edition
Summary

Search billions of records and discover your family's story with Ancestry Library Edition.

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Search billions of records and discover your family's story with Ancestry Library Edition.  

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NC LIVE
Summary

What is NC LIVE? The power of your library, online! We give you free access to e-books, audiobooks, videos, online magazines, newspapers, journals, and more.

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NCpedia
Summary

NCpedia is an online encyclopedia that highlights North Carolina's unique resources, people, and culture to enrich, educate, and inform.

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New York Times (text based)
Summary

New York Times (1980-current), New York Times Magazine (1997-current), and New York Times Book Review (1997-current) full text access is provided via U.S. Newsstream (ProQuest). This resource is text based.

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New York Times - Digital
Summary

NYTimes.com is a multi-platform news tool that provides access to New York Times and International New York Times content, including breaking news, multimedia, reviews and opinion, blogs, videos and more. NYTimes is updated 24/7.

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For the best experience, use Microsoft Edge browser.

NYTimes.com is a multi-platform news tool that provides access to New York Times and International New York Times content, including breaking news, multimedia, reviews and opinion, blogs, videos and more. NYTimes is updated 24/7. Access includes all online content except for the crossword puzzle. Full access is provided for NYTimes articles published between 1851 thru 1922, and between 1981 thru current day. Access to the years 1923-1980 is limited.

To access the New York Times via Charlotte Mecklenburg Library, you will need to use an individual New York Times account. 

From inside the library:

  • Use a library computer or connect your own device to the library wifi
  • Go to nytimes.com/register
  • Register with your personal email address or click on "login here" if you already have created a New York Times account
  • Enjoy unlimited access to the New York Times!

For offsite access:

  • Click on the remote access link
  • Enter your library card number
  • Click "Redeem" to get 24 hours of continuous access
  • Register with your personal email address or click "login here" if you already have created a New York Times account

After 24 hours, you will need to redeem another pass by repeating these instructions for continued access. *A limited number of offsite passes are available per day.

Troubleshooting:

Do you get a screen like this?  Are you using Google Chrome?

Click "Ignore" and you will go on to redeem a pass.  We are unsure why Google Chrome is marking this an unsafe site.  We have contacted NYTimes about a solution and are hoping they fix the issue.  NYTimes recommends using Microsoft Edge browser for optimal experience.

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News Literacy Project
Summary

News Literacy Project, a nonpartisan national education nonprofit, provides programs and resources for educators and the public to teach, learn, and share the abilities needed to be smart, active consumers of news and information and equal and engaged participants in a democracy.

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It’s getting harder to separate fact from fiction. 

News Literacy Project, a nonpartisan national education nonprofit, provides programs and resources for educators and the public to teach, learn, and share the abilities needed to be smart, active consumers of news and information and equal and engaged participants in a democracy.

What is news literacy?  News literacy is the ability to determine the credibility of news and other content, to identify different, types of information, and to use the standards of authoritative, fact-based journalism to determine what to trust, share, and act on.

To access the free resources News Literacy Project offers for the public, click “For Everyone”.

Checkology

Customized version of News Literacy Projects e-learning platform for the public.  People of all ages can now learn how to identify credible information, seek out reliable sources, and know what to trust, what to dismiss, and what to debunk.

Get Smart About News

Get Smart About News is a free newsletter designed for the public exploring timely examples of misinformation as well as press freedom and social media trends and issues.

Informable

With News Literacy Projects free mobile app, everyone can practice four distinct news literacy skills in a game-like format: distinguishing news reports from opinion pieces; advertisements from other types of information; false claims from credible evidence; and fact-based statements from opinion-based statements.

Podcast

Is that a fact?, News Literacy Project’s podcast, informs listeners about news literacy issues that affect their lives through informative conversations with experts working to combat misinformation.

Tips & Tools

How news-literate are you?  Test and sharpen your news literacy skills with short activities, engaging quizzes and shareable graphics. 

 

Are you an educator?  News Literacy Project has tools available to you to help in the classroom.  Click on “For Educators.”

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North American Women's Letters and Diaries
Summary

North American Women’s Letters and Diaries contains over 150,000 pages of published letters and diaries plus 4,000 pages of previously unpublished materials depicting the personal experiences of hundreds of women from Colonial times to 1950.

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North Carolina Center for the Nonprofits
Summary

Since 1990, the N.C. Center for Nonprofits has been a statewide network for nonprofit boards and staffs, an information center on effective organizational practices, and an advocate for the nonprofit sector as a whole.

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