I’ve been trying to organize a local tool library in my neighborhood, and it’s been way harder than I expected just to get a simple shared spreadsheet going. Everyone has a different idea of how to log items or track borrows, and it’s turned into this messy patchwork of notes. I’m starting to wonder if we actually need a more structured platform to handle this, but I’m not sure where to even begin looking for something that’s simple and either free or really cheap. Has anyone else hit a wall like this with a small community project?
That sounds rough I know the patchwork can sap the energy from a tool library project a simple digital log finally let us borrow without chasing people and it kept the focus on helping neighbors not on endless forms
I would not rush to a platform yet the friction may be about habits not tech a plain template log and a weekly check in might reveal what the community actually wants in the tool library
Try a lightweight setup a shared sheet with two tabs one for items and one for borrows and a few field prompts like who what when and why and a tiny read me that tells people how to use it it keeps things moving
Maybe the issue is not the tool but the rituals and norms around borrowing if you can agree on a small set of rules and a gentle cadence you may find the right balance for the tool library without over engineering it
Team up with a nearby group like a school or library to host the log as a shared file then you can test what works with real neighbors and scale later if needed this can cut back on churn
Some folks will push for fancy features others want nothing but a simple log we could aim for a minimum viable platform that proves value before adding complexity in the tool library
Let the discussion drift toward expectations writing craft and genre habits of the community you may discover the right tone for the tool library and realize a simple form can be enough