Handbook of the New Library of Congress
Entering by either of the doors at the head of the staircase, the visitor at
once steps out upon an embayed gallery, affording a spacious and uninterrupted
view of the great domed reading room, or rotunda, which, in every sense, is the
central and most important portion of the library. As such, it is marked by a
magnificence
magnifiscence of architecture and decoration nowhere else to be found in the
building. Outside, from whatever direction one approaches, the gilded dome that
forms its outer shell is the first thing to catch the eye; and the golden flame of the
one word delete
torch that surmounts the lantern indicates to the passer-by at at once the central
and the highest point of the whole structure. Within, richer materials have been
than
used, and decoration has been more freely employed then in any other part of
the library. Sculptures and paintings, rare marbles, and a broad scheme of color
and of ornamentation in stucco relief unite with a lofty architectural design to
form what is one of the most notable interiors in the country.
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The Importance of the Rotunda. The detailed description of the rotunda
may be deferred a little however, in order to explain its relationship to the rest of
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the building, and, especially, the reason for its central position. Besides
accumulating books and providing students with proper accommodations for
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their work—such as a good light and convenient chairs and tables –it is the
well-managed
business of every well managed library to supply its readers with the books they
desire in the shortest possible time and with the least possible amount of
catalog
friction. A well-digested catalogue is the first requisite; the second is that the
books should be stored in a place as closely accessible to the reading room as
possible. In a small library, this is a simple matter the same room will be
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sufficient for both books and readers. When the number of volumes increases it
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is necessary to shelve them in a compact system of bookcases called a “stack”—
or, as in the Library of Congress, in a series of stacks—which must occupy a
portion of the building by itself. The reading room and the stacks being thus
separated, it is still the aim of the architect to place them in such a way as to
retain as far as possible the practical convenience of the smaller library, where
every reader is almost within reaching distance of every book. This end is most
easily attained by adopting what is called the “central system” of library
construction, which is the system followed in the Library of Congress. It has
is
already been seen that the building ins in the form of a cross enclosed within a
rectangle, thus allowing space for four courts for light and air. At the
intersection
intersections of the arms of the cross is the rotunda, the main entrance to which
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is through the West arm of the cross. The other three arms are occupied by the
stacks; the east stack, directly opposite, is the second short arm; the north and
south stacks, each the same length, are the two long arms.