When you support The Seattle Public Library Foundation, you ensure that our mission is carried out in the following key areas:
Accessible and Welcoming for All
A PLACE FOR WONDER, JOY, AND SOCIAL CONNECTIONS: The library attracts diverse audiences from all backgrounds. Everyone is welcome at the library.
Evolving community needs require updates to facilities that extend beyond maintenance. The Foundation supports reimagining projects designed to adapt and energize library spaces to help keep up with changing services, programs, and community needs.
Watch this video to see patrons of the Lake City Branch of The Seattle Public Library share what the library’s programs and services mean to their community.
A Story for Everyone
EVERYBODY SHOULD BE ABLE TO READ WHAT THEY WANT: Free access to a deep, diverse collection of books and materials is essential for our society. Foundation funding provides the library with the resources necessary to enhance the general collection, invest in books in more languages, furnish special collections, give away books at community programs, and increase access for people facing restrictions on reading. Beyond adding 1 in 3 new items at the library each year, Foundation support allows the library to stand up for the right to read by making its collections available for young people nationwide through our Books Unbanned e-card program.
Watch this video to see how the South Park Branch of The Seattle Public Library meets the needs of the community, providing a story and resources for everyone.
Early Literacy and Lifelong Education
SPREADING KNOWLEDGE ACROSS OUR COMMUNITY: The Seattle Public Library Foundation provides funding that allows our library system to reach a new level of excellence. Seattle is able to offer a diversity of programs that provide access to knowledge for people of all ages and backgrounds—for literacy, language, skill-building, workforce development, and much more. Programs such as the Global Reading Challenge, the Adult Education Tutoring program, Learning Buddies, and more mean that everyone can learn.
Watch this video to learn more about the Foundation-funded 2023-2024 Global Reading Challenge, a collaboration between the library and Seattle Public Schools that encourages reading as a fun and recreational activity for fourth and fifth graders.
Cultural Events and programs
ENRICHING AND BUILDING COMMUNITY CONNECTIONS: The library has the unique ability to elevate overlooked voices, expose people to new ideas, and bring together groups from across our society. Free access to stories and programs helps enrich people’s lives and represent diverse perspectives. The Foundation funds 22 library programs that give more people more opportunities to learn, engage with art, express their own stories, and understand the viewpoints of others. Cultural events and programs at the library enrich our community with inspiration, entertainment, and social connections, including the Authors Series, Seattle Reads, Literary Community Curator, and more arts and civic engagement programming.
Watch this video to see the 2024 Seattle Reads Kickoff, featuring Octavia Butler’s “Parable of the Sower.”
A Place of Belonging
FREE TO BE ME: The Seattle Public Library Foundation supports the people who bring our libraries to life. From circulation to community connection, Library staff help ensure that everyone has access to the materials, space, and opportunities they need. Dylan, a Library Associate with a background in theater, sees the library as an extension of storytelling—sharing books, movies, and music while also providing something even more powerful: free and welcoming space for all.
Watch this video to hear Dylan share how the library allows him to serve the community while also being his authentic self.
The Next 10 Years–Planning For You
LOOKING AHEAD TOGETHER: The Seattle Public Library Foundation helps the Library to grow with our city. With your input, the Library has developed a Strategic Plan to guide its operations over the next ten years, ensuring that services, spaces, and resources continue to meet the needs of every community member. The plan focuses on literacy, empowerment, enrichment, sustainability, and the capacity to serve a diverse and dynamic Seattle.
Watch this video to see how the Library is building the future—with you at the heart of it all.
Mobile Services—Bringing the Library to You
WITH WHEELS INSTEAD OF WALLS: The Seattle Public Library Foundation helps bring the Library to those who can’t always come to us. Through Mobile Services, Bookmobiles travel across the city to connect older adults, people with disabilities, preschoolers, and others with books, DVDs, technology, and—most importantly—community. From lobby stops at senior living facilities to visits at preschools and tiny house villages, Mobile Services makes nearly 100 stops each month, serving thousands of Seattle residents.
Read this story to see how Mobile Services delivers not only books, but also connection, belonging, and joy.
Read the story
With Wheels Instead of Walls, Mobile Services Delivers Books and Connection

On a rainy morning, residents of Council House, a low-income senior living facility on Capitol Hill, are getting their monthly library fix.
Every third Tuesday of the month, The Seattle Public Library’s Mobile Services team unloads the Bookmobile and sets up a pop-up library in the community access room of the building. Residents trickle in to pick up holds, browse shelves of books, DVDs, and CDs, check out items, and to catch up with each other and the three Library team members who are staffing the stop.
As Knate, a longtime resident of Council House, will tell you, the combination is magical.
“It’s an incredible service,” he says. “They bring a lot of smiles and they love Interacting with everyone. It’s really a special event.”
Knate, who brings a wheeled cart for his checkouts, always visits the Mobile Services stop with his wife.
“I love literature and books,” he says. “It’s such an essential part of who we are. Libraries and books are infinite. There’s always something to discover.”

Although not an official “branch” in the system, the Library’s Mobile Services unit circulates as many materials as a smaller branch library, around 59,000 items annually. Five days a week, Mobile Services staff travel to every corner of the city in Bookmobile vans to bring Library materials and resources to people who cannot access the Library in other ways.
Prioritizing visits to facilities in under-resourced communities, every month, they visit 70 facilities for older adults or people with disabilities, 31 preschools and two tiny house villages. They package up items to send to 66 Books by Mail patrons, and make monthly doorstop deliveries to 30 others.
“Mobile Services looks like one thing, but it’s actually a bunch of different services,” explains Robin Rousu, managing librarian for Mobile Services.
Personalized service infuses every aspect of their work. This might look like an initial conversation with a patron to determine the right service for them, or wheeling a cart with materials room-to-room at a nursing home to deliver cozy mysteries or books about architecture to residents who are physically unable to leave their room.

Rousu says that the team’s ultimate goal is connection. The walk-on Bookmobile stops at preschools connect young readers with positive experiences around books. For older adults, lobby stops form unique and essential connections to books, DVDs and other resources, and to each other.
“One of the best things about the lobby stops is it creates a little community gathering for neighbors, and sometimes that’s the only time of the month that they actually see each other and talk and chat and get to know each other,” Rousu says. “We keep people connected to part of the world.”

At the Council House stop, this sense of community is visible. Patrons browse together and sit down at tables to review their finds. Library staff members circulate the room to restock shelves and help patrons find what they want, chatting, joking, and answering questions.
Nancy, who has lived at Council House for 19 years, says, “It’s wonderful that they come here.” She says it’s been harder for her to get to a physical library and appreciates help ordering e-books through Libby, too.
Marilyn, another resident, says that the personal touch is really special. “What I love is that the Library staff always remember our names. And if a resident isn’t there that month, they’ll ask about them.”
“What I love is that the Library staff always remember our names. And if a resident isn’t there that month, they’ll ask about them.”
The whole team is amazing, says Rousu of her staff, “including how much they care about the patrons and how much the patrons really depend upon and appreciate the service.”

Mobile Services helps patrons connect in other ways, including loaning tablets and Wi-Fi hot spots. Patrons report that this access has allowed them to keep up with social and religious connections, shop online, and more.
Rousu has had many experiences that have illustrated the value of this connection in her 17 years with Mobile Services, but one in particular is unforgettable. Back in 2010, she was part of a team that arrived at an older adults’ residence for a monthly stop. As they began setting up, they noticed something different.
“There was a memorial service going on in the lobby,” she remembers. “It was for one of the residents, a library patron, who had passed away.”
The patron’s neighbors had intentionally planned the memorial service during the lobby stop “because the Bookmobile was one of the most important things in her life,” Rousu says.
“She had very limited speech, but this was the time when she really was connected to the outside world the most.”
Fast facts about Mobile Services

Vehicles: Four, including one all-electric Bookmobile
Monthly visits: Mobile Services visits 31 preschools, 72 adult facilities/buildings and two tiny house villages a month, serving 2,700 people. Adult facilities primarily serve seniors, including low-income people and people with disabilities, and include retirement homes, nursing homes, assisted living facilities, adult family homes, senior centers, one hospital and the King County Correctional Facility.
Preschools served are public programs for low-income families, private programs that have at least 25% subsidized students, or programs that serve primarily students with disabilities. See eligibility criteria for Mobile Services.
Deliveries: Books by Mail to 66 individuals; monthly deliveries to 30 home service patrons.
People served: 1,100 preschoolers and 1,600 older adults a year, as well as around 15 other individuals.
Checkouts: Mobile Services patrons check out 60,000 items a year, and place 12,000 holds.
Find out more at www.spl.org/MobileServices.
– Elisa M., Communications
Become an insider with The Seattle Public Library Foundation
Do you want to receive exclusive email updates directly from the Foundation?
Get direct access to a member of our team, who will share information about how you've helped keep our libraries strong and other relevant information.
