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Amazing Libraries Around the World

We know you're out there. You bibliophiles who can't get enough of bookshelves stacked floor to ceiling, hallways lined with card catalogs, mahogany desks with bankers' lamps. We sympathize. We love a good library, too. For those of you who worry about your house someday sinking from the weight of your books, we've rounded up a selection of amazing libraries from homes, universities, and cities across the globe...

 
 

FIRST ROW
1 Chicago, Illinois: Home Library by Wheeler Kearns
2 London, England: Staircase Library by Levitate Architects
3 Dublin, Ireland: Trinity College Library from Libraries by Candida Höfer
4 Prague, Czech Republic: Franz Kafka Society by Holl and Steinbachová
5 Washington, DC: Library of Congress

SECOND ROW
6 Paris, France: Pierre Chareau's Maison de Verre Bookcase
7 Copenhagen, Denmark: The Royal Library by Schmidt Hammer Lassen
8 Seattle, Washington: Seattle Public Library by Rem Koolhaus
9 Växjö, Sweden: Halmstad Library by Schmidt Hammer Lassen
10 Cahuita, Costa Rica: Casa Kike by Gianni Botsford


(Photos: Heidrich Blessing, Kristin Hohenadel, Dezeen, Candida Höfer, Flickr member saturnism via Creative Commons license, Francois Halard, Flickr member bjaglin via Creative Commons license, Flickr member Christmas w/a K via Creative Commons license, Schmidt Hammer Lassen, Christian Richters via ArchDaily)

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Comments (26)

I really like this library, the University Library of Utrecht (the Netherlands)

http://www.eikongraphia.com/?p=256

posted by AlexHoogeveen on July 2nd 2009 at 7:36pm
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Im done living inside a book! I wanna live inside a library like those ones!!! :)

posted by mouracs on July 2nd 2009 at 7:54pm
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Are #2 & #3's labels reversed?

posted by Niamh on July 2nd 2009 at 7:56pm
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I love the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin.

http://www.galinsky.com/buildings/staatsbibliothek/index.htm

posted by RSB on July 2nd 2009 at 8:10pm
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I am a certified(able) bibliophile. I believe Niamh is correct. The labels for #2 & 3 appear to be reversed.

posted by sara mc on July 2nd 2009 at 8:33pm
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@ Niamh - No, but #3 and #4 are reversed.

Trinity College is the gorgeous old space and Kafka is the revolving wall bookcase.

posted by elvedon on July 2nd 2009 at 8:41pm
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Do I have to point out that Czechoslovakia doesn't exist anymore?

posted by michpc on July 2nd 2009 at 9:25pm
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One of the most fun libraries I've ever visited in the library at the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, near Grand Central. It's one of the largest law libraries in the world, and it is built with little iron catwalks and circular iron stairs to get up to the catwalks. Really old lawyers who don't want to admit that they're out of the game sit there all day in their formal suits at old fashioned wood desks and tables with beautiful green lights.

Of course, everything is now computerized, but the old-fashioned alternative is kept up for the sake of tradition.

posted by AustinSarah on July 2nd 2009 at 11:51pm
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michpc is rigt! Prague is the capital of the Czech Republic.
The libraries are gorgeous, by the way.

posted by Juli_bp on July 3rd 2009 at 12:17am
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If it's tough appreciating these libraries, consider them relative to this beaut...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/markestes/1454319957/

posted by Paul @ StructureHub on July 3rd 2009 at 1:18am
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Ah, I love beautiful libraries...

Have a look at this one: Armagh Public Library in Northern Ireland! http://www.armaghrobinsonlibrary.org/ Also a long room with a gallery like Trinity, but a whole lot smaller. Will I make you envious? Will I?

This is where I work!!!

posted by mulelia on July 3rd 2009 at 2:37am
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http://www.miragebookmark.ch/most-interesting-libraries.htm

posted by ephi on July 3rd 2009 at 3:48am
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ephi's got one of my favourites linked: Vancouver Public Library - over 20K people go into that library per day - and the design is such that lots of people pass through all the time. It's an amazing space.

Here's another fave: Chetham's Library in Manchester, UK, the oldest library in the English speaking world (founded 1653). http://www.flickr.com/photos/lauronsky/2976392043/

posted by wc_canuck on July 3rd 2009 at 6:28am
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These are beautiful designs, but they're obsolete. Our computers' memory chips have taken the place of all those volumes.

posted by ebanfield on July 3rd 2009 at 8:36am
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@ebanfield, not until they are all scanned and digitized (and freely available to all!!!) and that's a long way off.

posted by charmac on July 3rd 2009 at 8:56am
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If you think that a computer takes the place of all this, then I think you might not get it.

Just to begin with, most of the knowledge and text in these books has not been digitized. There's just no other way to have access to this stuff other than to open the book.

And then there's the issue of the book being more than the sum of its parts. The size, dimension, font, margins, gutter, and a million other factors impact the reader's interaction with the text. This is why book design matters, and as of now, there's no way to duplicate that on a computer.

Nevermind the impact of these spaces as both architectural works and as public archives.

posted by nothingfuture on July 3rd 2009 at 8:58am
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The Seattle Public Library IS really cool- visually. Not much else about it is so thrilling. It's super noisy, always crowded with loiterers, and above all, it smells terrible. I really do mean terrible. Pretty much unbearable and not a place where I'd feel comfortable lingering amongst the books.

posted by shockthebourgeois on July 3rd 2009 at 11:00am
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Digitized books are also unable, IMHO, to replicate the gorgeous color plates contained in art/architecture/botany/history books.

posted by enmnm on July 3rd 2009 at 11:04am
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Thanks for the corrections. They have been fixed in the post.

posted by sarah c on July 3rd 2009 at 11:20am
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University of Oklahoma has a beautiful library, inside and out.

posted by sofistiphunk on July 3rd 2009 at 12:29pm
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The American Antiquarian Society, built in 1909, in Worcester, Mass. has a beautiful reading room, with a domed ceiling and huge marble columns, floor to ceiling. I love working in such a historic and beautiful building!

http://www.americanantiquarian.org/ahall4.htm

posted by Bungalow24 on July 3rd 2009 at 1:23pm
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Here's a lovely, though rather obscure, one:

http://www.greatbuildings.com/buildings/Mount_Angel_Library.html

Best of all, it's filled to the brim with original Aalto furniture. Oh, and some books too!

posted by veedub on July 3rd 2009 at 4:27pm
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Library of Canadian Parliament - http://www.flickr.com/photos/cephalosporin/3635084459/

posted by LauraII on July 6th 2009 at 10:01am
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What, no pictures of the Mexico City library (unfortunately, unopened, last I heard) which has hanging racks and walkways...

posted by dn on July 6th 2009 at 11:50am
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Newberry Library (chicago) www.newberry.org

posted by Kimberly B on July 6th 2009 at 2:34pm
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I'm happy to see Seattle on the list, but I think the Suzzallo library on the University of Washington should be too....

http://www.flickr.com/search/?s=int&w=all&q=suzzallo staircase&m=text

posted by vividot on July 7th 2009 at 7:37pm
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