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List of contents
Part 1: Precedents 1. European Influences: Before 1800 2. Early Public Libraries in the U.S.: 1800 to 1880s 3. Early Beaux-Arts Libraries: 1850s to 1910s 4. Carnegie Libraries: 1890s to 1920s 5. Decentralized Departmental Libraries: 1890s to 1930s 6. Early Modern Libraries: 1920s to 1940s 7. Postwar Modern Libraries: 1950s and 1970s 8. Post-Modern Libraries: 1970s and 1980s Part 2: Projects 9. Central Municipal and Regional Libraries 10. Urban Neighborhood Branch Libraries 11. Suburban Neighborhood Branch and Community Libraries 12. Collocated Libraries, Additions, and Modernizations 13. Libraries in Northern Europe Bibliography. Image Credits. Architect and Firm Biographies. Index.
About the author
R. Thomas Hille is an architect, educator, and researcher based in Seattle, Washington, USA. His previous books on architecture and design include Modern Schools and Inside the Large-Small House.
Summary
The New Public Library is an in-depth design study of an exemplary collection of recent public libraries, and the historical precedents that have informed and inspired their development. Highly visual in its presentation, the study includes 885 color photographs and illustrations, and 195 scale drawings.
Additional text
“The New Public Library is a fascinating study of library design in time. The book is lavishly illustrated, with plenty of color and black and white images and drawings to support the extensively researched text. It is mouth-watering in equal measure for architects, designers, librarians and library historians. The book can inspire worldwide travel, but can also be enjoyed by armchair-travelers.”Sergio Dogliani, Idea Store, Tower Hamlets (London, UK)