How 18-year-old engineering students saved U of T's rarest books - Action News
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Toronto

How 18-year-old engineering students saved U of T's rarest books

The solution for a moisture problem that threatened the University of Toronto's oldest books came from an unlikely source: a first year engineering classroom.

Group of students came up with fix for dampness seeping through library walls

Yewon Son was in first-year university when she and a group of fellow students came up with a fix for condensation in the rare books library. (CBC)

Yewon Son craned her neck, looking up at the high ceilings and packed shelves of the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library a building that holds, among other treasures, a 4,000-year-old cuneiform tablet,papyrus from the time of Christ and medieval manuscripts that come from the fourth century.

It was the 21-year-old University of Toronto engineering student'sfirst time looking carefully at the books and manuscripts she helped save back when she was just18 and ina first-year class.

Up until a few months ago, the brittle paper, papyrus and vellum housed in the librarywere under threat: the aging walls of the 1973building, attached toRobartsLibrary,were failing, allowing water to get through.

"Mould in a book is deadly, because mould can also spread. It's very difficult to treat," explained P.J. Carefoote, head of special collections at Fisher.

The team at Fisher spoke with architecture firmsand were told each time they'd have to move the books to accomplish a fix.

Not relishing a solution that would move delicate books from their regulated environment andshut down the library for an extended period, they turned to an engineering class.

It was Son, along with five of her classmates, who came up a solution: instead doing internal repairs, they suggested coating the outer walls with foam to prevent moisture from seepingin.

The library is full of items that would be severely damaged by moisture, said P.J. Carefoote: 'Our oldest item is a 4,000-year-old cuneiform tablet. We also have papyrus from the time of Christ and Medieval manuscripts that come from the fourth century.' (CBC)

Sifting through 'crazy, stupid ideas'

Son's group was in first-year university, taking a class on engineering problem-solving, when they were presented with the water issue.

"We were right out of high school. We didn't have any of the industrial, or technical, or architectural skills," she said.

But a teaching assistant encouraged them to get creative.

Thanks to that advice, "even if we thought it was a crazy, stupid idea, we threw it in," said Son.

They ranthegamut of possibilities, including installing pipes inside the walls to funnel away water, before finally landing on their best idea: sprayable insulation on the outside walls, topped in concrete to match the rest of the library exterior.

After they presented their idea to U of T staff, Son didn't think much about it. It was only in January of this year, three years later, that she found out their pitch had been selected as the fix for the library.

"That's actually crazy.When I heard I was really excited," she said. "That's when I realized that even first years who don't really know what they're doing can make a difference."

Spray-on foam coats the outside of the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library on the University of Toronto's downtown campus. (CBC)

The project ishalf finished the concrete layer still needs to go in but Carefoote and the library staff couldn't be happier.

"Books like to have constant temperature and constant humidity," said Carefoote. Now, thanks to layers of foam, they have it.

The project is expected to be completed by March 2017.