Birmingham Central Library
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Birmingham Central Library | |
| Building | |
|---|---|
| Type | Library |
| Architectural Style | Brutalist |
| Location | Chamberlain Square, Birmingham, England |
| Coordinates | Coordinates: |
| Construction | |
| Completed | 1974 |
| Design Team | |
| Architect | John Madin |
Birmingham Central Library is the main public library in Birmingham, England.
The main body containing the music library, collections, and Birmingham Reference Library is located on several floors over Paradise Forum, with the main entrance and lending section in Chamberlain Square.
Contents |
[edit] History and earlier building
The first municipal library occupied the northern half of a site on Edmund Street and facing the Town Hall. The site had been acquired from the Birmingham and Midland Institute (BMI) after they had commenced construction of their own institute building on the southern half, which was to include a public library - a referendum under the Free Libraries Act 1850 on the creation of a municipal library having failed. A second vote in 1860 agreed on the building of a library, causing the Corporation and the BMI to cooperate in a joint site. A design by E. M. Barry had been chosen by the BMI but was too expensive for the Corporation, so they chose William Martin to design all but the façade. The library was opened in 1865, but during the building of an extension in 1879 a fire caused extensive damage, destroying most of the 50,000 reference books.
The library was rebuilt on the same site by Martin & Chamberlain and opened in 1882. As the number of books increased, the Council approved the creation of a replacement library in 1938, but it was not until the late 1960s, and the need for the new Inner Ring Road that action was taken, and the current building constructed alongside. The original library and the BMI were demolished and the site is now part of the UCE Birmingham Conservatoire and its gardens. The site the current central library is now situated was originally the Mason College and Liberal Club.
[edit] Collections
Special features include the Boulton and Watt collection, the Bournville Village Trust Archive and the Railway and Canal Historical Society Library.
The specialist Shakespeare Memorial Room was designed in 1882 by John Henry Chamberlain for the previous Central Library. It contained several early William Shakespeare folio editions. When the old building was demolished in 1974 Chamberlain's room was dismantled and fitted into the new concrete shell of the new library. It is in an extension of the main building alongside Birmingham City University music department's Adrian Boult Hall and used for Birmingham Conservatoire concerts. The room now contains the secondary collection of Shakespearean books and is mainly used as a small meeting room.
[edit] Architecture
The current 1974 Brutalist building designed by John Madin (the third library on the site), an inverted ziggurat, has famously been described by Prince Charles as "looking more like a place for burning books, than keeping them". Nonetheless, the Twentieth Century Society is campaigning for its retention.[1]
It is a complex multi-level structure which extends below the Centenary Square ground level to form part of a busy junction (Paradise Circus) on the Inner Ring Road and was intended to include a bus station at the road level, although this was never provided. Paradise Forum, containing shops and bars, was created in 1988 when the windy space under the hollow main building was enclosed and the pedestrian access to Centenary Square improved.
Architectural commentator Jonathan Glancey described it as follows in the The Guardian in 2003:
"The great inverted ziggurat of Birmingham, and its 30 miles of bookshelves, rises from a tide of commercial schlock. Its entrance is next door to a frantically busy branch of McDonald's. Its internal courtyard is home to a souk of trashy shops and stalls.
The library owes its curious profile to US precedent, not to commercial design. Its architect, John Madin, a home-grown talent, based its design on that of Kallman, McKinnell and Knowles's Boston City Hall (1963-68). It has real presence, and it is not hard to imagine it being transformed, with the help of sympathetic and imaginative architects, artists and designers, into a popular hub of fresh cultural activity.
Originally, it was meant to have stood amid water gardens rather than burger bars, which would have softened the blow of its muscular design. Sadly, the money ran out. This was not a cheap building: concrete slabs were faced in Hopton Wood stone; ceilings were coffered in much the same way as the great libraries of Ancient Rome would have been; furniture was custom-designed by the architects. Shopping mall and McDonald's aside, the building is a generously thought out piece. And, despite the case against it, the council is rather proud of the fact that the library remains, and will do so right up to the point of demolition, the city's busiest public building, attracting over 5,000 visitors a day."''
[edit] Library of Birmingham
A replacement library, to be called the "Library of Birmingham", on a new campus in the city centre's "Eastside" was planned. and Birmingham City Council commissioned the Richard Rogers Partnership to develop the concept designs. However, for financial reasons this plan has been shelved. The Council had suggested that the Library be split between a new building built between the Rep theatre and Baskerville House at Centenary Square, which as of January 2006 is a public car park (to house the main lending library) and a building at Millennium Point in "Eastside" (to house the archives and special collections).
In August 2006, the Council confirmed the area between the Rep and Baskerville House as the future site for the library. Capita Symonds has been appointed as Project Managers for the Library of Birmingham. The council's intention is to create a "world class" landmark civic building in Centenary Square.[2]
However, it is possible that two-sites idea will be scrapped and the archives and special collections will move to the site at Centenary Square.[3][4]
After an international design competition, run by the Royal Institute of British Architects, a shortlist of seven architects was announced on March 27, 2008. They were chosen from a list of over 100 architects. The architects chosen were:[5]
- Foreign Office Architects
- Foster and Partners
- Hopkins Architects
- Mecanoo
- OMA
- Schmidt Hammer Lassen
- Wilkinson Eyre
[edit] Sources and references
- ^ One step closer to save Birmingham Central Library? - press release from the Twentieth Century Society (28 October 2006)
- ^ Capita Symonds appointed as Project Managers for the Library of Birmingham - Press Release by Birmingham.gov.uk (1 September 2006)
- ^ Library plans could be shelved - Birmingham Post (Jan 24 2007)
- ^ *Autumn 2007 update on move
- ^ Deborah Harries (2008-03-27). Library Design Team Shortlist Announced. Birmingham City Council. Retrieved on 2008-03-27.
- Joe Holyoak. All About Victoria Square. ISBN 0-901657-14-X.
- Stuart Davies. By the Gains of Industry - Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery 1885-1985. ISBN 0-7093-0131-6.
- Rachel E Waterhouse (1954). The Birmingham and Midland Institute 1854-1954.
- Architects' Journal: Paradise Circus; Architects: John Madin Design Group, Birmingham Metropolitan District Council Architects Department vol. 9, no. 2, 1974 June, p. 8-20.
- Architects' Journal: Birmingham central library; Architects: John Madin Design Group vol. 159, no. 21, 1974 May 22, p. 1137-1157.
- Interior Design: Birmingham central libraries; Architects: John Madin Design Group 1974 May, p. 292-295.
[edit] External links
- Birmingham City Council pages about the Central Library
- Birmingham City Council pages about the Shakespeare Memorial Room (with picture)
- Architectural Critic Jonathan Glancey writes about the Library in March 2003
- Madin's views on the state of the library, Jan 2007
- Your Icons Highlights from the Birmingham Central Library collection
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