Kirk-Bear Canyon Branch Library
About Kirk-Bear Canyon Branch Library
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Meeting Rooms

Please call 594-5275 for more information and to reserve the meeting rooms. Please read our Meeting Room Policy (PDF). See meeting rooms available at other library locations.
Print out a Meeting Room Use Application (PDF).
- Meeting & Study Rooms
- We have one large meeting room (capacity 100, 1280 sq. ft.) and two smaller conference rooms (capacity 8, 120 sq. ft.).
Computers
You may reserve a computer up to two times per day. We offer:
- 12 computers with 60 min. sessions
- 3 computers with 30 min. sessions
- 3 computers with 60 min. sessions for teens in the Teen Room
We also have wireless internet access available. Bring your laptop and use the library's WiFi network for free. For more information, please see our WiFi FAQ.
Friends of the Kirk-Bear Canyon Branch Library
We are committed to promoting the resources, services and needs of the library. Money raised is used to improve the library's services to the community, foster closer relations between the library and the community, assist in enhancing the library's environs and encourage volunteerism on behalf of the library.
The Friends of the Kirk-Bear Canyon Library Book Discussion Group discusses a different book on the last Thursday of each month. Contact Lee Wagner at 749-0570 for more information. View listing of book discussion dates and times.
Learn more about our Friends group.
Canyon Cascades Sculpture
The Friends of the Kirk-Bear Canyon Branch Library are proud to present the Canyon Cascades sculpture.
The sculpture, by artists Selina Littler and Kathy Hoyer, was commissioned for the branch library by the Friends of the Kirk-Bear Canyon Branch Library. In the early stages of designing the sculpture, the artists asked patrons to submit one word that best embodied the spirit of the Kirk-Bear Canyon Branch Library.
The letters in those words cascade down a stylized waterfall to re-form in a small pool at the base and across the surface of several granite boulders. It is intended to be a "lighthearted beacon" representing the spirit of the library and its multi-functional purpose for the community.
View photos of the sculpture on Flickr:
