The Library offers tabletop charging stations at tables located around the Information Commons on the first floor. These stations each feature Apple Lightning connectors and USB type-C connectors. The stations are secured to the table, and the adaptor cords are secured within the stations, allowing for multiple users at a table to charge their devices simultaneously while using them.
For more information,or to provide feedback on the table top charging stations, please contact the Student Technology Consultant at the Computing Help service desk in the Information Commons.
Dell and Apple USB-C device chargers are also available for checkout from the Information Desk on the first floor
The UWB/CC Campus Library also circulates a variety of equipment to students from the Information Desk on the 1st Floor. All equipment must be returned to the library desk, not to a book return. (None of this equipment may be renewed online or over the phone.)
Equipment available for checkout from the Information Desk - Including accessibility equipment
The Activities and Recreation Center (on the other side of Campus Way) also has a variety of equipment available for students to checkout.
While recharging your device in the Campus Library, never leave it unattended, even for a brief moment! It may only take seconds for you to lose your device to theft at any time in any location! The Library assumes no liability for loss or damage by anyone using the recharging stations.
The Campus Library does not provide technical troubleshooting for personal devices beyond helping students connect to Library resources.
University of Washington Bothell & Cascadia College
Campus Library
Box 358550
18225 Campus Way NE
Bothell, WA 98011-8245
425-352-5340 (Voice & Relay)
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Land Acknowledgment: The University of Washington Bothell & Cascadia College Campus Library occupies Land that has been inhabited by Indigenous Peoples since time immemorial. Specifically, this campus is located on Sammamish Land from which settler colonists forcibly removed Coast Salish Peoples to reservations in the mid-19th century. Today, descendants of the Sammamish are members of several Coast Salish communities.