Neha Patil (Editor)

Central Library (Brooklyn Public Library)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Area
  
2.8 acres (1.1 ha)

NRHP Reference #
  
01001446

Phone
  
+1 718-230-2100

Built
  
1911-1940

Added to NRHP
  
January 11, 2002

Architect
  
Raymond F. Almirall

Central Library (Brooklyn Public Library)

Location
  
Grand Army Plaza Brooklyn, New York City

Sculptor
  
Thomas Hudson Jones and C. Paul Jennewein (bronze gateway)

Address
  
10 Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn, NY 11238, USA

Hours
  
Open today · 9AM–9PMTuesday9AM–9PMWednesday9AM–9PMThursday9AM–9PMFriday9AM–6PMSaturday9AM–6PMSunday1–5PMMonday9AM–9PM

Architectural styles
  
Streamline Moderne, Beaux-Arts architecture

Similar
  
Soldiers' and Sailors' A, Prospect Park West, Prospect Park Zoo, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Brooklyn Museum

The Central Library of the Brooklyn Public Library, located at Flatbush Avenue and Eastern Parkway on Grand Army Plaza in Brooklyn, New York City, contains over a million cataloged books, magazines, and multimedia materials. Each year, over one million people visit the library.

Contents

Facility

The facility, landmarked in 1997, boasts the state-of-the art S. Stevan Dweck Center for Contemporary Culture, a 189-seat auditorium that opened in 2007 and hosts lectures, readings, musical performances, and other events for people of all ages. The library's plaza, renovated during the construction of the Dweck Center, hosts concerts throughout the summer and has become a favorite outdoor destination for free wireless internet access.

The Shelby White and Leon Levy Information Commons opened in January, 2013. The space offers an integrated venue for individual work, public classes, private events, and meetings.

The Central Library's local history division, The Brooklyn Collection, holds over a million individual items including photographs, maps, manuscripts, Brooklyn Dodgers memorabilia and other ephemeral items.

History

Ground was broken for a Brooklyn central library on Prospect Park Plaza (Grand Army Plaza) in 1912. The design of the original architect Raymond Almirall called for a domed, four-story Beaux Arts building, similar in style to the nearby Brooklyn Museum. Escalating costs and political in-fighting helped slow construction throughout the decade. World War I and the Great Depression ensured that Almirall's building, whose Flatbush Avenue wing had been completed by 1929, would never be built.

In the 1930s, the architects Githens and Keally were commissioned to redesign the building, eliminating all the expensive ornamentation and the entire fourth floor. After much public and critical praise for the comparatively inexpensive Art Deco structure, construction recommenced in 1938. Almirall's building on Flatbush Avenue was largely demolished except for the frame. (Some of the original facade that faces in toward the library's parking lot is still visible.) Completed by late 1940, the Central Library opened to the public on February 1, 1941. It is regarded today as one of America's greatest Art Deco buildings.

The second floor of the Central Library opened in 1955, nearly doubling the amount of space available to the public. Occupying over 350,000 square feet (33,000 m2) and employing 300 full-time staff members, the building serves as the administrative headquarters for the Brooklyn Public Library system. Prior to 1941 the Library's administrative offices were located in the Williamsburgh Savings Bank on Flatbush Avenue.

The Central Library was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002.

References

Central Library (Brooklyn Public Library) Wikipedia