toollibrary.jpg
The newly opened NE Seattle Tool Library offers dozens of tools from circular saws to extension ladders to check out for free. (Josh Kerns/MyNorthwest.com photo)

Why buy when you can borrow from new Seattle tool library

Over the holidays, I needed to hang some Christmas lights on the eaves of our new house. They're a little high, but I figured my old 6-foot ladder would be good enough. I could have also used a staple gun, but was too cheap to spring for one. Bad mistake. As I stood on the top rung to hammer a nail, the ladder gave and I hit the deck, tweaking my knee.

It turns out I didn't have to go through any of that, if I'd simply borrowed an extension ladder and tools from the new NE Seattle Tool Library.

Just like its name says, the library is a place you can borrow all sorts of tools, from ladders to circular saws and just about everything in between.

"There's a lot of tools that people just don't really need to own. So this provides a way for the community to share the resources we have together," says Susan Gregory, one of the organizers of the new library.

As we stand in the converted church storage building with neatly organized and cataloged tools on one side, a small workshop with several table saws and drills on the other, Gregory beams with pride at the all-volunteer project that took a year to bring to fruition. It all stemmed from a brainstorm as Gregory and others in the neighborhood tried to come up with a community project that would land a $50,000 grant from Cleanscapes for their organization Sustainable NE Seattle.

Gregory had seen a similar tool library in West Seattle and figured why not in Ravenna?

"You know a lot of times people will say 'I have a pressure washer, I've used it twice, I don't really need it. I got it for a project, I don't need it and other people could be using it.'"

But it turns out there's an ulterior motive. Gregory admits the tool library is about more than just tools. She and the other founders are passionate about the environment and reducing our impact on the earth.

"You know, there doesn't have to be an extension ladder in every household, so that cuts down on the amount of aluminum, it cuts down on driving to the Home Depot to buy it. Sorry Home Depot, but it cuts down maybe a little bit on the amount of money people spend," she says.

That's not to say the NE Seattle Tool Library is looking to put Home Depot out of business. In keeping with their green ethos, they won't be lending any gas powered tools like blowers and chain saws.

And Gregory says she's confident as people get more handy thanks to the library, they'll actually turn to the hardware stores for more supplies and heavier equipment when they need it, so it's a win-win.

The Tool Library also offers a variety of how-to books, and will soon offer workshops.

To use the Tool Library, all you have to do is sign up for a membership online. It's free to join and check out tools. But they are encouraging donations. They'd also love any of your unused tools, which of course you can borrow whenever you want.

"We're off to a good start, but hoping for a lot more donations," Gregory says.

I just wish I'd known they had an extension ladder, before my Christmas light catastrophe.

Josh Kerns, MyNorthwest.com Reporter
Josh Kerns is co-host of KIRO Radio's Seattle Sounds (Saturday nights 7-8) and a digital content producer for MyNorthwest.com.
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Comments (9)


  • Add A Comment

  • darthclown wrote...
    We had a similar thing in the Army
    on Ft. Bragg, A 12 bay garage with tools available for sign-out so you could do your own vehicle maintenance. It was always busy. I always thought that it was a good idea.
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • hawks$life wrote...
    yeah
    Every base has one. Because when a service member doesn't bring it back, it easy enough to track him down and contact his CO. And when a service member cut his finger off, you won't have a lawsuit on your hands
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • murr wrote...
    It takes a village
    For those that dont mind being controlled by some one else. I prefer to be more independent. I dont like sharing.
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • SickofSeattleite wrote...
    It seems like that 50,000 dollar grant money could be put to better use
    by applying it to either WA states deficit oe the Nations...
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • murr wrote...
    Ohh yea it could, but you know
    They could care less, its free money to them. Its tax money, no one cares, just have to get it spent, so they can get more next time.
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • shark75 wrote...
    Why do I get the feeling that tax dollars are being funneled into this
    Where did Cleanscapes get the money? If this is purely funded by private money, good - cool idea. It just seems like all too often little "projects" like this (especially in Seattle) get their funding from "revenue" that was confiscated from a taxpayer.
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • Snout wrote...
    Geez, guys.
    If you need to rent a tool and then read some book on how to use it you should probably just hire someone. Too bad your dads didn't teach you how to operate simple tools.
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • Drool wrote...
    Snout
    So therefore people should remain ignorant? Nothing wrong with reading how to use a tool. I've done it many a time and I'm a former boatbuilder by trade. There is always more to learn.
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • GJO wrote...
    Cut down on driving to Home Depot
    So are you telling us no one drives to the "library" to get the tools. You can only get the extension ladder is you walk to the "library". Well thought out comment Susan.
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }