Join us by building a Little Free Library in your front yard!
Our editors and experts handpick every product we feature. We may earn a commission from your purchases.Learn more.
Join us by building a Little Free Library in your front yard!
Our editors and experts handpick every product we feature. We may earn a commission from your purchases.Learn more.
Two days
Intermediate
$200 - $600
I’ve wanted to make a Little Free Library for a long time. It’s a fun project that will help a neighborhood strengthen its sense of community, bringing people together through sharing books. The whole family can enjoy this weekend project, and the whole neighborhood will appreciate it.
This is our first Community Project. We hope you’ll build one too and share the results with us.
Jay Cork thinks building a Little Free Library makes up for all his unpaid late fees at the real library.
Overall dimensions: 32-in. wide x 18-3/4-in. deep x 35-in. high.
Overall dimensions: 12-1/4-in. wide x 3/4-in. deep x 14-in. high.
KEY | QTY. | PART | DIMENSIONS |
A | 1 | Clear acrylic | 9-1/2″ x 11-1/4″ x 1/4″ |
B | 1 | Base | 32″ x 18-3/4″ |
C | 2 | Sides | 12-3/4″ x 14″ |
D | 1 | Back | 29″ x 32″ |
E | 1 | Gable face | 29″ x 18″ |
F | 2 | Roof panels | 19-3/4″ x 29″ |
G | 2 | Doorjambs | 2-3/4″ x 14″ |
H | 4 | Door rails | 1-3/4″ x 12-1/4″ |
J | 4 | Door stiles | 1-3/4″ x 14″ |
Back in 2009, Todd Bol made a small model of a one-room schoolhouse. He placed it on top of a post in his front yard in Hudson, Wisconsin, and filled it with books. He encouraged neighbors to “take a book or leave a book,” and they did.
Word quickly spread of the Little Free Library. In about three years, Bol and his nonprofit partner, Rick Brooks, knew of more than 2,500 such libraries.
Today, the nonprofit organization recognizes more than 100,000 registered libraries in more than 100 countries around the world. The group’s mission is to build strong communities by expanding book access in public places around the world.
As a reader, I love discovering one of these little book shelters and peeking inside to find my next literary escape. As a woodworker, I jumped at the chance to design and build one.
The editors of Family Handyman invite you to build a Little Free Library. You can use our design or create your own. It’s a fun project, and we’d love to see photos of your completed library. Send them to [email protected].
You can also order a kit from the Little Free Library website. There are many models to choose from, and prices start at $160. The kits include automatic registration; if you create your own, don’t forget to register it. When you do, your library will be included on the Little Free Library map and discoverable in the mobile app. If you’re interested in this project but don’t want to buy all the materials, consider repurposing unused items.
Whether you build a library or not, consider donating to the nonprofit. Ten bucks can go a long way to help place these libraries where they’re needed most! Here are the other things you can put in a little free library.