More About Butler Library
Butler Library houses the 2 million million volumes of
Columbia University's
general collection in the humanities and in the social sciences
prior to 1974. It is the largest of the more than twenty libraries
and collections comprising Columbia University Libraries. The
building was financed by Standard Oil executive and philanthropist
Edward S. Harkness and designed by James Gamble Rogers, opening in
1934 as "South Hall." It was renamed in 1946 in honor of
Nicholas Murray Butler, president of the University from
1902-1945.
Although traditional in its Italian Renaissance design, the
building was equipped with the latest library technology available
at the time. The core of the library is the fifteen-tier
steel-shelved stack, which was then the largest stack ever built as
a single unit. The stacks (though not the reading rooms and
offices) were air-conditioned; stack lighting was designed by
George Ainsworth to approach the quality of natural light; there
was an electric book lift, an electric book conveyor, and a lighted
call board behind the main desk to inform students researchers that
books were ready to be checked out.
|