From humble beginnings
The collection initially grew slowly. 12 years after founding, the collection had doubled, and 7 years later it had doubled again. After three-quarters of a century, it reached 100,000 volumes. Growth then increased pace and a century after its establishment, the collection exceeded 800,000 volumes. Today the Ƶapp holds over 2 million physical items, including books, archives, journals and a miscellany of other items.
Financing the Ƶapp followed a similar path. A century ago, the annual provision for the Ƶapp was the imperial equivalent of $30. It was not until 1906 that the Professorial Board established a committee on the Ƶapp and its report requested that books be arranged and put in order and that $200 a year be used for purchasing items. By 2010, the budget for the collection stood at $8.4 million of which 76% was spent on electronic rather than print resources.
Finding a home
While Canterbury College was founded in 1873, forty-three years passed before a home was found for the tiny collection. Initially, books were locked in glass cases in the hall and later moved to a gloomy little room under the Worcester Street clock tower. The first library building was ready for use in 1916. With the move to the Ilam campus, the Ƶapp was split. First the Engineering Ƶapp, and later the Physical Sciences Ƶapp, moving to the new campus. Finally, in 1974, the rest of the Ƶapp moved to the Ilam campus and was housed in the newly constructed James Hight building (now known as Puaka-James Hight).
A separate Law library was established within the James Hight building and then moved to a new Law building (now renamed Mere Mere), only to come back to Puaka-James Hight in recent years. The Physical Sciences Ƶapp closed and its collections moved to the Engineering Ƶapp (now called the Engineering and Physical Sciences Ƶapp). The Macmillan Brown collection of New Ƶappand Pacific materials came out of a locked room in James Hight and into a permanently staffed library of its own.
With the merger of the University and Christchurch College of Education, the Henry Field Ƶapp on the old Christchurch College of Education site joined the fold. Following changes on that campus, Henry Field became a library store and the Education collections were incorporated into Puaka-James Hight.
Moving with the times
While the campus libraries are important for the storage of the physical collection, they are more important as study and learning spaces for students. Technology has also become an integral part of libraries. The Ƶapp provides online access to a wide range of electronic resources, subject guides, and services. Efforts to improve the quality of online materials, especially in this increasingly mobile world, continue and the Ƶapp focuses on the provision of study spaces, support and friendly face-to-face and online help.