Drop-in and meet with the Our Third Place Team!
💜;♡ 🧩⋆✩🎵°𓏲⋆.* 💜˚ ♡ 🧩⋆。˚🎵 ★ °‧♡ 💜;♡ 🧩⋆✩🎵°𓏲⋆.* 💜˚ ♡ 🧩⋆。🎵 ★ °‧♡ 💜
Did you know there was another Teen Space in Glendale? Our Third Place at the Didi Hirsch building at 1540 East Colorado is that place! Drop by to learn more about what they offer for people 15 - 25 years old.
Local mental health professionals from Didi Hirsch's Our Third Place will be in Work Room A inside the Teen Space to talk with youth between ages 15 - 25 years of age who would like to learn more about the free, mental health supportive services they offer to the Glendale Community. They also offer events that teens can attend to earn community service hours for school. See their June events calendar here: https://didihirsch.org/our-third-place/calendar/
Visit the Our Third Place website here:
https://didihirsch.org/our-third-place/
💜;♡ 🧩⋆✩🎵°𓏲⋆.* 💜˚ ♡ 🧩⋆。˚🎵 ★ °‧♡ 💜;♡ 🧩⋆✩🎵°𓏲⋆.* 💜˚ ♡ 🧩⋆。🎵 ★ °‧♡ 💜
PARKING
Visitors to the Glendale Central Library receive 3 hours FREE parking across Harvard Street at the Marketplace parking structure with validation at the service desk. Accessible parking is available on the east side of the building.
For additional information about this event, please contact Central Library at 818-548-2021 or send us an email at LibraryInfo@GlendaleCA.gov.
EVENT TYPE: | Teen Community Service | Health & Wellness |
TAGS: | Teens | Teen Community Service | teen | Adults | Adult |
Established in 1906.
Library services in Glendale were first provided in 1906. The women of the Tuesday Afternoon Club, a social and philanthropic organization, raised money through a series of lectures to fund a library collection. The library opened in a renovated pool room at Third and E (Wilson and Everett) Streets with seventy books, soon supplemented by a State Traveling Library of fifty more, and served a population of 1,186.
In 1907, the City Trustees passed Ordinance 53 which established and supported a library which "...shall be forever free to the inhabitants and nonresident taxpayers of the City of Glendale..." The first year the library had 251 books, 165 registered patrons, and a budget of $248.88.
In 1913, a Carnegie grant of $12,500 made possible the construction of the main library at Kenwood and Fifth (Harvard Street). The building was completed and dedicated November 13, 1914.