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Campaigners hoping to save Kensal Rise Library from being turned into flats are staging a protest in Oxford on Saturday.
The Friends of Kensal Rise Library are hoping to stop the building's owners, All Souls College, from selling the Victorian library to developers, leaving only a small space from which to run a library.
On Saturday, they will take their campaign to the college, and hope to speak to the Fellows directly about the fate of the building.
Margaret Bailey, from the campaign, said: "We represent a larger community that sees the College's current proposal as nothing short of a breach of faith with this relatively poor area of north-west London, from which it has already profited handsomely. Although the College donated the land, the library building from which the College and Mr Gillick now seek to profit was not paid for by the College, but by public subscription and a donation from Andrew Carnegie, the philanthropist."
The library reverted to the ownership of All Souls following Brent Council's decision to close the library last year.
Ever since, The Friends group have been trying to re-open the building, originally opened by Mark Twain, as a community library, raising more than £80,000 in donations to help them put together a business plan and running costs.
However, the college has now said it plans to sell the building to developers, with only a small space for a library service.