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Low Memorial Library

The Low Memorial Library (nicknamed Low) is a building at the center of Columbia University's Morningside Heights campus in Manhattan, New York City, United States. The building, located near 116th Street between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue, was designed by Charles Follen McKim of the firm McKim, Mead & White. The building was constructed between 1895 and 1897 as the university's central library, although it has contained the university's central administrative offices since 1934. Columbia University president Seth Low funded the building with $1 million (equivalent to $33 million in 2021) and named the edifice in memory of his father, Abiel Abbot Low. Low's facade and interior are New York City designated landmarks, and the building is also designated as a National Historic Landmark.

Low Memorial Library
NYC Landmark No. 0304, 1118
Location in Manhattan
LocationCampus of Columbia University, New York City
Coordinates40°48′30″N 73°57′43″W / 40.80833°N 73.96194°W / 40.80833; -73.96194Coordinates: 40°48′30″N 73°57′43″W / 40.80833°N 73.96194°W / 40.80833; -73.96194
Built1894–1897[1]
ArchitectCharles Follen McKim of McKim, Mead, and White[1]
Architectural styleNeoclassical
NRHP reference No.87002599
NYCL No.0304, 1118
Significant dates
Added to NRHPDecember 23, 1987[4]
Designated NHLDecember 23, 1987[4]
Designated NYCLExterior: September 20, 1966[2]
Rotunda interior: February 3, 1981[3]

Low is arranged in the shape of a Greek cross. Three sets of stairs on the library's south side lead to a colonnade with a frieze describing its founding. The steps contain Daniel Chester French's sculpture Alma Mater, a university symbol. The library is four stories tall, excluding a ground-level basement. The building's raised first floor has an entrance vestibule, as well as an ambulatory around an octagonal rotunda, which leads to offices on the outer walls. The rotunda contains a sky-blue plaster dome and four Vermont granite columns on each of its four sides. The library's stacks could store one-and-a-half million volumes; the east wing hosted the Avery Architectural Library and the north wing hosted Columbia's law library.

The library was built as part of Columbia University's Morningside Heights campus, which was developed in the 1890s according to a master plan by McKim. When Low Library was completed, it was poorly suited for library use, becoming overcrowded from the early 20th century. Low's central location, however, made it a focal point of the university's campus. Following the completion of the much larger Butler Library in 1934, the Low Memorial Library was converted to administrative offices.

Site

Low Memorial Library is at the center of Columbia University's Morningside Heights campus in Manhattan, New York City.[5][6][1] The building's official address is 535 West 116th Street, though the section of 116th Street between Broadway to the west and Amsterdam Avenue to the east is part of the private College Walk.[7] Low is raised above the northern portion of the campus, which itself is a terrace above the South Court to the south.[8] The library building occupies the highest point of the original campus.[9][10]

The building is surrounded by Miller Theatre and Lewisohn Hall to the southwest; Earl Hall to the west; Mathematics and Havemeyer Halls to the west; Uris Hall to the north; Schermerhorn, Avery, and Fayerweather Halls to the northeast; St. Paul's Chapel to the east; and Buell, Philosophy, and Kent Halls to the southeast.[11] Earl Hall and St. Paul's Chapel are both designed along the same west–east axis as Low.[12] This arrangement is part of McKim, Mead & White's design for the campus.[13]

Low Library steps

 
The stairs leading to Low are a popular meeting area for Columbia students and are also used for commencements, speeches, and other events.

Two flights of steps connect the terrace to the South Court;[14] the library proper is approached by another flight above the terrace.[15] Known as "the Steps", "Low Steps", and occasionally "Low Beach", they are a popular meeting area for Columbia students.[16] They also serve as a connection between the northern and southern sections of Columbia's campus.[17]

One 325-to-327 ft (99-to-100 m) wide flight leads from the South Court to an intermediate landing, and a narrower, 134-to-140 ft (41-to-43 m) leads from the intermediate landing to the terrace.[18] The narrower flight itself has an intermediate landing[17] containing Alma Mater, a sculpture by Daniel Chester French[19] that depicts a woman, personifying the traditional image of the university as an alma mater.[20] Hidden in the statue's leg is an owl symbolizing knowledge and learning; according to college superstition, the first member of the incoming class to find the owl will become class valedictorian.[21][20] The centers of the stairs are slightly curved upward to remove the impression they were sagging.[22] As a result, the center of each step is about 3.5 in (8.9 cm) taller than the extreme ends.[23] Smaller sets of staircases connect the intermediate landing to passages at terrace level on the west and east.[15]

Architecture critic Paul Goldberger said of the steps in 1987: "The building itself, for all the power of its immense scale and huge dome, seems almost to recede, deferring to the stairs before it."[17] During commencement speeches, Columbia's "graduation mace" is customarily carried down the stairs.[24] The stairs have been used for other speeches, such as a 1991 speech by novelist Salman Rushdie after the Iranian government targeted him for assassination.[25]

Architecture

 
South elevation, from the upper stories of Butler Library

The Low Memorial Library was designed by Charles Follen McKim of McKim, Mead & White and was built between 1894 and 1897.[1][26][27] McKim was assisted in the design by William M. Kendall, Austin W. Lord, and Egerton Swartwout.[28] The library was designed in the Neoclassical style, incorporating many elements of Rome's Pantheon[29] and Baths of Caracalla.[30] It was funded by Seth Low, the president of Columbia University and later the mayor of New York City, in memory of his father Abiel Abbot Low.[31]

Form

Low is arranged in the shape of a Greek cross, is aligned with the Manhattan street grid, and contains beveled corners. The main walls of the building's Greek cross correspond to the four cardinal directions.[32] The cross has a maximum width of 192 ft (59 m).[33][10] The Greek cross layout had previously been used in several libraries, including the main library of New York University (NYU)'s Bronx campus (now Gould Memorial Library on the campus of Bronx Community College) that was designed by McKim's colleague Stanford White.[34] Low's arrangement, like that of Gould's, is partly inspired by those of the Library of Congress and the British Library. Unlike these other libraries, Low was designed to face away from much of the campus that was designed around it.[35]

The building is topped by a round dome[36] made of brick, which is clad on the outside with limestone, and on the inside with steel framing and plaster.[37] The dome has a radius of 52 ft (16 m) and has a maximum thickness of 48 in (120 cm) at the bottom, tapering to 9 in (23 cm) at the pinnacle.[38] The steel frame under the dome is made of two 1 in (2.5 cm) thick and 12 in (30 cm) wide steel bars. The ceiling of the rotunda beneath is a false ceiling that hangs about 16 ft (4.9 m) below the inner face of the dome.[39] Otherwise, the dome is made of stone that is designed to be self-supporting.[10][39] The dome was inspired by the Rotunda, the main library designed by Thomas Jefferson at the University of Virginia, and is also less directly evocative of the dome above the Pantheon.[40]

Facade

 
Frieze inscription

The 12 ft (3.7 m) high base of Low is made of granite.[41] An 86 ft (26 m) wide staircase with 22[33] or 26 steps[15] leads from the terrace to the main entrance portico on the building's south facade. The highest step, the stylobate of the portico, corresponds to the top of the base.[15] The entrance portico consists of an Ionic-style colonnade of ten columns supporting a cornice and attic.[36] Each of the columns is 35 ft (11 m) tall[42] and has a diameter of 4 ft (1.2 m).[33] The frieze above the columns reads: "Library of Columbia University".[43] An inscription above the colonnade describes the university's founding.[6] It reads:[44]

King's College Founded in the Province of New York
By Royal Charter in the Reign of George II
Perpetuated as Columbia College by the People of the State of New York
When They Became Free and Independent
Maintained and Cherished from Generation to Generation
For the Advancement of the Public Good and the Glory of Almighty God[44]

The building was designed with 150 windows, the smallest of which measures 10 by 4 ft (3.0 by 1.2 m).[45] The upper section of the facade is clad in limestone,[46] in contrast with the surrounding buildings, which are generally made of brick with limestone trim.[47] The west, north, and east walls are designed with pilasters similar in design to the colonnade; the pilasters flank windows that are deeply set into the facade. The corners of the Greek cross also have deeply set windows. The roof of the Greek cross's "arms" is about 70 ft (21 m) above the ground level of the terrace.[15]

Above the top of the cross, Low's walls, which rise to 100 ft (30 m) above the surrounding terrace, are arranged as an octagonal drum supporting the dome.[15] Each of the four main walls have large, half-round windows[36] that are either 44 or 50 ft (13 or 15 m) across and 22 ft (6.7 m) high,[15][45] and are evocative of the lunettes atop the Baths of Caracalla.[48] The top of the dome is around 135 ft (41 m) above terrace level[10][15] and 152 ft (46 m) above the grade of what was formerly 116th Street.[15]

Features

Low has four stories. The ground level is a raised basement while the first floor is one story above ground.[49] The first floor's interior consists of an entrance vestibule on the south side of the building that leads to an ambulatory surrounding a central rotunda.[50] Low's first floor shares design influences with the reading room at the Library of Congress's Thomas Jefferson Building, the Administration Building at the World's Columbian Exposition, and the nearby Grant's Tomb.[51] The second floor had a gallery on the south arm and the closed stacks on the north, east, and west arms. The third floor was devoted entirely to lecture rooms.[15]

The library's stacks were built to store one-and-a-half million volumes. Graduate students used the open stacks and adjacent small reading rooms while undergraduates could use only the closed stacks, using the rotunda as a central reading room.[52] Eighteen small reading rooms were provided.[53] Elmer E. Garnsey was hired to create the library's interior color scheme.[54] As of 2010, the exhibition space in the building is open to the public from 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.[26] Columbia students, staff, and faculty can book the spaces on the first floor for events.[55][a]

Vestibule, president's room, and trustees' room

 
Trustees' room

Low's main entrance contains bronze and glass entrance doors leading to a double-height vestibule[56] measuring 30 by 33 ft (9.1 by 10.1 m).[44] The original doors were made of oak; McKim had proposed bronze doors be used but Low rejected the doors as "out of harmony with our ideals and with the ideals of my father".[57] At the entryway are bronze busts of Zeus and Apollo.[58] The vestibule has a marble floor with red, rust, beige, and gray panels in an octagonal arrangement.[59] George W. Maynard sculpted eight panels with bronze reliefs depicting the twelve zodiac signs;[58] the panels were manufactured by John Williams and displayed at the World's Columbian Exposition, after which they were donated to Columbia University.[57] The vestibule contains a white marble bust of Pallas Athena, which is modeled after Minerve du Collier at the Louvre.[60]

Oak doors on the west and east link to sets of four marble steps, which connect to the former offices of the president and the trustees, respectively.[56] Above these doors are stone architraves with molded leaf-and-dart motifs and lintels with paneling. On either side of the doors are double-height limestone pilasters with gilded capitals.[61] Several portraits were hung in each room.[44] The trustees' room to the east was decorated by the Herter Brothers with oak paneling.[57] The center of the trustees' room has a Georgian-style fireplace mantel, which contains a broken pediment holding an iron crown from King's College, the predecessor of Columbia University. The mantel has a cornerstone from King's College's original building and a portrait of the college's founding president Samuel Johnson.[62]

The rest of the vestibule's walls have plaster panels bordered by green-and-gold acanthus-leaf motifs, and band courses with Greek fretwork. Each corner of the vestibule has a pilaster similar to those flanking the west and east doors, as well as a wrought-iron lamp. The south wall has a narrow balcony illuminated by a lattice of crossbars; the north wall is a double window above a set of four steps leading to the rotunda. Laurel leaves and medallions divide the vestibule's ceiling into nine coffers.[61] The central coffer has a bronze lantern above the Pallas Athena bust.[63]

Ambulatory

The ambulatory is an octagonal hallway around the rotunda[64] consisting of alternating long and short passages; the long passages correspond to the cardinal directions while the shorter passages correspond to the intercardinal directions.[61] The floor has alternating marble squares and circles that are laid in hues of red, yellow, and black-and-white.[65] At the floor's center is a bronze bas-relief of the university's seal.[61]

The walls of the long passages have Doric-style limestone pilasters and orange plaster panels, bordered by leaf motifs and band course like those in the vestibule. There are also oak panels that correspond to the rotunda's former bookcases.[61] The south hallway contains a pair of green, double-height, Connemara marble columns that screen it from the entrance vestibule.[66] The columns, each of which weighs 25 short tons (22 long tons; 23 t), were quarried from the largest blocks of Connemara marble available when the library was built.[33] The ceiling of the south hallway is divided into five coffers and a bronze lamp hangs from the outermost coffer on either side. The west, north, and east hallways have similar ceilings but are illuminated by three bronze lanterns.[61] The north hall has a balcony while the south and east halls have gates to the rotunda.[67]

Offices and additional libraries surrounded the ambulatory.[68] At the center of the outer walls of the west, north, and east hallways are double wooden doors that lead to offices.[61] Formerly, these doorways led to catalogue and specialized libraries.[69] The doors on the east hall led to the Avery Architectural Library while the north hall's doors led to the law library.[70] The Avery Architectural Library's ceiling beams bore inscriptions of architects' names.[54] The west hall's doors led to the administrative offices,[15] and the west wing had contained the periodical, catalogue, and delivery rooms.[71] The periodical room measured 61 by 37 ft (19 by 11 m) and had a two-story-high ceiling. There was also an exhibition room measuring 39 by 54 ft (12 by 16 m).[72]

Decoration in the short passages is simple: The unornamented walls are made of plaster and have arched, recessed doorways flanked by simple pilasters. The halls have arched ceilings and are illuminated by bronze lamps on marble pedestals, below which are lions' heads and above which are glass globes. Staircases rise to the upper levels, which are adjacent to each of the short sections of the ambulatory.[73]

Rotunda

 
Underside of dome
 
Seen c. 1900–1910
The building was later converted to administrative use and the rotunda became a ceremonial space.

The center of Low's first floor contains an octagonal rotunda, the library's former reading room.[56] The rotunda has four long walls corresponding to the cardinal directions and four short walls corresponding to the intercardinal directions.[b] The reading room contained circular tables, each of which was lit by a reading lamp.[74] The reading room's seats were arranged in four concentric rings.[75] Four columns adjoined a reference desk at the center of the rotunda. Above the columns was a decorative iron structure topped by a four-sided clock with a bronze sculpture of an eagle.[76]

Each of the rotunda's main walls include four Vermont granite columns with gilt-bronze, Ionic-style capitals that screen the rotunda from the ambulatory.[77] Each column is 29 ft (8.8 m) tall, supporting a third-story balcony,[72] and each of the capitals weighs almost one ton.[33] Vermont marble was chosen because it closely resembles Connemara marble, which could not be used for the rotunda due to the scarcity of large pieces of that material.[78] Bookcases rising to eye level were originally laced between the columns to give the impression of an enclosed space.[79] Depictions of Roman and Greek luminaries Demosthenes, Euripides, Sophocles, and Augustus Caesar are placed on the balcony along the north wall.[80] McKim personally funded he figure of Euripides.[81] Twelve figures were planned for the other walls but these figures were never built.[82]

The corners of the rotunda have large, limestone piers that serve as pendentives for the rotunda's ceiling; the piers contain gold circles and have internal ducts.[83] Inscriptions of the medieval sciences Law, Philosophy, Medicine, and Theology decorate the piers.[84] The tops of the pendentives are beveled.[85] The rotunda's piers also support vaults on each of the building's main walls, which include half-round windows.[15] During daylight hours, the lunette windows atop the walls provided sufficient illumination.[86]

The rotunda's ceiling is 105.5 ft (32.2 m) tall and 73 ft (22 m) across.[87] The ceiling is a false dome made of plaster over steel mesh and is painted sky blue.[88] The false dome's ribs are spaced four ft (1.2 m) apart at the springing of the arches.[39] A sphere that reflected light from eight spotlight beams on the room's third-floor balconies at night was suspended from the ceiling.[89] The globe was intended to resemble the moon.[90] The sphere was seven ft (2.1 m) across and hung from a steel, one-quarter in (6.4 mm) thick wire, giving the impression it floated in midair.[91] It is not known whether the spotlights were ever used for their intended purpose but the sphere has since been removed.[92]

Other stories

A sub-basement contained heating and ventilating apparatus, and a storage room.[10] There are doors at each of the basement's four corners.[93] When the Low Memorial Library was operating as a library, students generally used these doors to enter the building because they were convenient entrances from the campus grounds.[75] The basement had cloak rooms, the office of superintendent of buildings and grounds, a sub-post office, a telegraph office, telephone booths.[44] It also contained a portion of the stacks,[94] which could store 150,000 volumes.[76] A separate stack room served the law library in the north wing, to which it was connected by stairs.[95]

The law library occupied the entire north wing, and the north side of the second story contained law collections. The east side had social sciences collections, with the Columbiana collection on the northeast corner and modern-language collections on the west side. The south wing, which is the top of the entrance vestibule, has only a balcony.[72] The third-story balconies formerly held the open stacks,[96] which were used by graduate students.[85] The gallery stacks held 16,000 volumes.[76] The third floor had history and philosophy collections, offices, workrooms,[72] and 10 lecture halls.[39] The layout of the second and third stories allowed different specialties to have seminar areas and private study rooms near the stacks corresponding to their subjects.[97]

History

In 1890, through his family's wealth and social connections, Seth Low became Columbia University's president.[98] The university's campus, which at the time was in Midtown Manhattan,[99] was quickly becoming cramped.[98] In April 1892, Columbia University acquired the former site of the Bloomingdale Insane Asylum between Broadway, Amsterdam Avenue, and 116th and 120th Streets in Morningside Heights.[99] The next month,[100] Low hired Charles Follen McKim, Charles C. Haight, and Richard Morris Hunt as consultants to plan a new campus on the newly acquired site.[101] Low wanted the consultants to collaborate but the process became an architectural design competition in practice, with each architect preparing multiple plans in different styles.[102] In April 1893 the architects presented their findings to the trustees.[103] Columbia ultimately hired McKim to design the new Morningside Heights campus in late 1893.[104][105] McKim was a relatively inexperienced architect at the time, but he had endowed a fellowship to the Columbia School of Architecture three years prior.[106]

Development

Planning

 
The final plan for Low Library, published in Harper's Weekly in 1894 on the eve of the building's construction

The center of the site was higher than its surroundings, leading McKim to develop a classical-style campus around the highest point.[107] Columbia's trustees approved the first iteration of McKim's campus plan in April[108] or May 1894; the plan had a rectangular library building surrounded on either side by symmetrical rows of buildings.[109][110] The library was to be built at the center of the campus, facing south toward a main entrance on 116th Street; there would also be a court to the north, an assembly hall to the west, and a chapel to the east.[111][110] In this plan, the pathways around the library were too narrow and the assembly hall, library, and chapel appeared to form a wall dividing the campus's north and south halves.[109] Consequently, the plans underwent further refinement through mid-1894.[112] McKim, working with his colleagues Kendall, Lord, and Swartwout, considered circular and octagonal layouts for the library before deciding on a cruciform layout.[113]

In July 1894 McKim wrote to his partner William Rutherford Mead saying though "the scheme for the Library has undergone many changes", he and his colleagues had devised a suitable revised plan.[114] The library would be placed on the site's highest point with a dome 300 ft (91 m) above the water level of the nearby Hudson River, and would be surrounded by the other buildings on campus.[115][45] To make the library stand out, McKim designed a grand stairway for the 116th Street frontage.[45][116] The assembly hall and chapel were moved from the library to the west and east, creating small courtyards on either side.[117] Seth Low had contemplated whether the other buildings should be ornately decorated so the trustees could approve of the design but McKim believed the library should have a simple-yet-grand style.[118] The trustees approved this proposal, under which the library would cost $700,000 (equivalent to $22 million in 2021[119]), in November 1894.[118][120][121] Later that month a model of the library was exhibited at the American Fine Arts Society.[122]

After plans for the library were approved, the trustees received bids for the construction of the library and surrounding buildings.[123] At the time, Columbia had sufficient funds to construct a few buildings but not the library.[31] In May 1895 the construction contract was awarded to Norcross Brothers.[123] A few days after the construction contract was awarded,[124] Seth Low donated $1 million (equivalent to $33 million in 2021[119]) to the library in memory of his father, Abiel Abbot Low. In exchange, the library would be named the Low Memorial Library.[125][126] The donation reportedly comprised a third of Seth Low's fortune.[127] News media profusely praised the donation,[31] which was reported for several days on the front pages of the city's newspapers.[128] McKim thanked president Low for the donation: "If, when the Library building shall be completed, your confidence in our firm prove to not have been misplaced, I shall regard [the library] one of the greatest happinesses of my life."[31]

Construction

 
Modern view of the rotunda

Seth Low asked McKim to draw designs for a library with a facade of marble, limestone, or brick and limestone.[129] The initial plans called for a marble facade but Low had been hesitant to use such an expensive material, preferring instead to use brick for the library.[130] McKim had wanted to use limestone, a material with a "monumental character".[118] Construction had started by June 18, 1895.[131] Initial work included excavation of the library's foundation.[132] Seth Low wished to hold a cornerstone-laying ceremony in late 1895, but he postponed these plans after the groundbreaking for NYU's Gould Library that October – he did not want to hold a similar event in such close succession.[132] The Low Library's cornerstone was informally laid on December 7, 1895.[133][134]

Construction of the library was delayed by disagreements over the dome's design.[135] When the walls were being constructed, McKim had planned to create the dome using concrete carried on iron trusses with limestone cladding.[136] Columbia's architecture departmental head William Robert Ware argued such a design would not be "a real dome".[137] McKim then proposed a Guastavino tile dome, to which Ware agreed. The Norcross Brothers then proposed an un-reinforced concrete dome they had planned themselves and McKim submitted plans to the New York City Department of Buildings (DOB). The DOB delayed issuing the permit until November 1895, likely in part because of the uncertainties over the new design.[137] By then, the architects feared cold weather would weaken the concrete, forcing the dome to be deferred until the following spring. Consequently, the dome was made of brick with an inner surface of metal lath and plaster, and a limestone exterior.[138] The site of Columbia University's new campus was officially dedicated on May 2, 1896,[139] by which time work on the library was rapidly progressing.[140]

Seth Low had wanted all the library's columns to be made of Connemara marble, but because of their large diameters only two columns of that size could be quarried with the material available. NYU had purchased sixteen narrower Connemara marble columns for its own library; its architect, McKim's partner Stanford White, boasted about how Columbia's library had been unable to secure the same material.[141] Columbia's two Connemara marble columns were placed at the entrance to the vestibule, where they were most prominent, and Vermont marble was used for the rest.[78] An issue about inscriptions for the exterior friezes, which Low started to discuss at the end of 1896, arose.[142] He devised some ideas for inscriptions during mid-1897, suggesting to McKim the inscriptions should describe Columbia's history.[143] The Columbia trustees disagreed whether such inscriptions should be in English or Latin, as well as their locations. Ultimately, they gave McKim permission only for the inscription above the main entrance.[91] In June 1897 Columbia's existing library closed for three months for the relocation of the collection.[144]

Use as a library

Early years

 
Low Library was not yet complete when the new Columbia University campus opened on October 4, 1897.[145]

The new Columbia University campus opened on October 4, 1897.[146][145] The opening was marked with a small ceremony in the library's reading room, during which Seth Low announced his resignation.[147][145] Low Library was not completed at the time; the power plant and other mechanical systems were not in operation,[145] and the final details were still being installed through 1898.[148] From its opening, the building served both as a library and as the university's administrative offices.[53] The library could store 450,000 volumes in its stacks.[149] Additional space on the third floor was being temporarily allocated to Columbia's political science and philosophy departments,[10] which were expected to relocate to dedicated quarters some time in the future, freeing space for another 600,000 volumes.[149]

University officials believed the new library was sufficient to accommodate the university's collection, which in 1896 contained 215,000 volumes and was adding 12,000 volumes annually. The campus had 1,353 students across all programs in 1898, and the library was expected to easily accommodate all these students.[149] The collection grew much more quickly after the opening of the Morningside Heights campus, reaching 300,000 volumes by 1900.[150] The following year, a university pamphlet said the library was open on weekdays between 8:30 a.m. and 11:00 p.m., and the library closed one hour earlier from July to September. At the time, the library had about 10,000 volumes in the general reading room, and 310,000 bound volumes and many pamphlets in the stacks.[53] The steps outside the library became a meeting area for Columbia undergraduates in the early years of the campus.[151] In 1903 the Alma Mater sculpture was installed on the steps leading to the library.[152]

Overcrowding

 
Low Library, c. 1902–05

The collection was organized in a compartmentalized manner, and departments expanded at different rates, causing problems for the building's operation as a library.[153] By 1902 Nicholas Murray Butler, who had replaced Seth Low as university president, was observing crowded conditions at the library[149] and, according to American Architect magazine, "One or two utilitarian points have been rather sacrificed."[154] In addition, the calling of books from the stacks was difficult. The 10,000 ft-long (3,000 m) pneumatic tube delivery system stopped working two weeks after it was installed, and a dumbwaiter system had also broken down.[76] The crowding increased in later years because the political science and philosophy departments did not move as scheduled, and because of increased enrollment – the university had 4,225 students by 1914.[149] The overcrowding was slightly alleviated in 1910 when the law collection was relocated to the newly built Kent Hall.[155][156] Avery Hall opened two years later;[157][158] by then, the Avery Architectural Library had also outgrown its space at Low.[155] The increasing overcrowding led Columbia's newspaper to say in a 1924 article: "'Library' is a misnomer for an edifice designed for the benefit of sightseers."[76]

In a 1921 report, Butler said: "Pressure upon the Library of the University has become such as well nigh to paralyze it."[159] In that year's university's annual report, Butler suggested a library could be created in University Hall, completion of which had been delayed for years.[159] A 1923 guidebook reported: "The room seats 152 readers, 15,000 reference volumes arranged on the shelves. The library contains in all about 835,000 volumes, beside pamphlets, manuscripts, and 50,000 doctoral dissertations."[72] The following August, Charles C. Williamson, who was appointed Dean of the Columbia School of Library Service in 1926,[160] wrote to Butler suggesting the creation of a new library.[161] Williamson said in his letter: "A condition has been reached which threatens to hamper the growth and development of the University."[162] Williamson suggested Columbia's library system needed space for at least four million volumes. Low's rotunda had become overcrowded with a reference collection while the card catalogs could not be sufficiently accommodated in the building.[161]

Williamson began soliciting funds from philanthropist and Columbia alumnus Edward Harkness, and he commissioned James Gamble Rogers to design a new library.[163] Rogers's ambitious plan to complete University Hall also included a bridge and tunnel connecting it with Low.[164] As part of this plan, Low's north wing would have been gutted and replaced with a staircase leading to the bridge.[165] The plan was never realized because large portions of University Hall would have had to be rebuilt to accommodate the weight of the books, and the project was deemed too expensive.[166] In December 1930 Butler asked Harkness to fund a new building on South Field facing Low from a site across 116th Street.[167] Rogers devised a final design for South Hall (now Butler Library) in April 1931.[168] The new library, which Harkness agreed to fund that May, would be able to hold four million volumes.[169][170]

Administrative offices

 
A commencement in front of Low Library, 2005

The new South Hall was dedicated on November 30, 1934.[171] A giant slide was used to transport the 700,000 books – 22 mi (35 km) worth – in Low's stacks to the new library.[172][173] Low continued to host the president's and secretary's offices, the summer session, and the Columbiana and Rare Book Collections. The rest of the building contained mostly faculty offices.[76] Because people continued to refer to the building as "Low Library", some students were confused and believed the building still served as a library.[174]

In the first few years after the South Hall library was completed, the Low building was used for events such as an exhibit of fine books,[175] a show of Navajo art,[176] and a display of rare religious art.[177] Low was also used to host large ceremonies with notable guests of honor,[76][174] including George VI and Queen Elizabeth of Britain, who visited Low in 1939,[178][179] as well as British prime minister Winston Churchill and Queen Juliana of the Netherlands.[76] In 1948 the west wing of the first floor was renovated as an office for the General of the U.S. Army Dwight D. Eisenhower when he became Columbia's president.[180] Edmund Astley Prentis, and his wife and sister, donated a colonial-style drawing room to Low Library in 1960.[181] Four years later, the north wing was turned into the Faculty Room, a reception hall with oak paneling.[182]

The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) designated Low as a city landmark in 1966.[183][184] During the 1968 Columbia protests, Low was occupied by students objecting to, among other things, the proposed construction of a university-owned gymnasium in Morningside Park and Columbia's involvement with the Vietnam War.[185] A major anti-war protest also took place at Low in 1972.[186] Among the less-conventional uses of the library's interior the 1970s was a model airplane club being allowed to use the rotunda to fly miniature aircraft at weekends.[187] The rotunda continued to host events like the annual Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards for news broadcasters.[188] The LPC designated the interior of the library's first floor as a city landmark in 1981,[1] and the building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1987 as a National Historic Landmark.[4]

In 2001 Columbia began to renovate Low's roof and add new mechanical systems to plans by David Paul Helpern Associates. The work was projected to cost $14.5 million (equivalent to $22.2 million in 2021[119]) and the installation of the new mechanical systems would enable Columbia officials to remove mechanical equipment from the roof. At the time, the building was still open to the public on weekdays from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.[174] In the early 21st century Low continued to be the location of large events such as protests and rallies. For example, in 2016, students conducted a sit-in and a "sleep-out" to demand divestment from fossil fuel companies,[189] and a chapter of Extinction Rebellion protested in the building in 2019.[190]

Impact

 
The 1954 Columbia University Bicentennial stamp depicts Low Library.

The Low Memorial Library was intended to symbolize Columbia's new campus and to serve as an administrative center.[191] A 1995 article from the journal Library Columns said Low's cornerstone symbolizes the cornerstone of the entire campus "not only architecturally, but philosophically and philanthropically".[118] Some early publications praised the design; one source said the library is "a utilitarian scheme artistically carried out",[149] and another ranked the library "among the foremost in the world".[192] In 2010 the AIA Guide to New York City described Low Memorial Library as "Columbia University's most noteworthy visual symbol" and a "dignified centerpiece for the campus".[26]

The Real Estate Record and Guide, believing Low to have been patterned after a French church by "the architect Rumpf", criticized Low's design as "plagiarized" from the older church.[174][193] Montgomery Schuyler, who resented the fact the Columbia campus had not been designed in a Collegiate Gothic style, wrote in 1910: "the library of Columbia is a 'library de luxe and not de books'," citing a French friend.[153][194] Architectural historian Richard Guy Wilson said: "The dome and space overpower while directional orientation to the necessities, such as picking up a book, are afterthoughts."[195] According to Wilson, Low's exterior has "a powerful, rude strength of classicism being reborn" with refinement only in its architectural detail.[195]

The Low Memorial Library has appeared in several portrayals of Columbia University in popular culture, including the 2005 film Hitch and the 2017 film The Post.[196] The library building has also been depicted on postage. In 1954, during the university's bicentennial, Low was commemorated on a postage stamp.[197] For the university's semiquincentennial in 2004, an image of the library was placed on a pre-stamped postcard.[198]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ According to Columbia University's website, the Faculty Room, Burden Room, Rotunda, and Trustees' Room on the first story above ground are denoted as being on the "second floor". This considers the ground floor as the "first floor".[55]
  2. ^ According to an 1898 Scientific American article, the "short diameter" between the longer walls is 75 ft (23 m) while the "long diameter" between the shorter walls was 85 ft (26 m).[33] According to a 1923 guidebook, the short diameter is 73 ft (22 m).[72]

Citations

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  2. ^ (PDF). New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. September 20, 1966. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 3, 2012. Retrieved January 17, 2015.
  3. ^ Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981, p. 1.
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  9. ^ New-York Tribune May 17, 1895, p. 1; Roth 1983, pp. 188–189.
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  12. ^ Stern, Gilmartin & Massengale 1983, p. 409.
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  14. ^ Architectural Record 1899, p. 86; National Park Service 1987, p. 2.
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  197. ^ Stiles, Kent B. (November 1, 1953). "Columbia University's Bicentennial Stamp First 1954 Issue". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on September 24, 2021. Retrieved September 24, 2021.
  198. ^ American Philatelic Association; American Philatelic Society (2004). The American Philatelist. American Philatelic Association. p. 383. from the original on September 24, 2021. Retrieved September 24, 2021.

Sources

  • Bergdoll, Barry (Autumn 1995). "Laying the Cornerstone of the New Columbia University (Library), December 7, 1895". Library Columns. Vol. 44. pp. 14–21. from the original on June 23, 2016.
  • Broderick, Mosette (2010). Triumvirate : McKim, Mead & White: Art, Architecture, Scandal, and Class in America's Gilded Age. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-307-59427-3. OCLC 698447571.
  • "Columbia University". Scientific American. Vol. 78, no. 13. March 26, 1898. pp. 200–202. ISSN 0036-8733. from the original on September 24, 2021.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Dolkart, Andrew S. (1998). Morningside Heights: A History of its Architecture and Development. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-07850-4. OCLC 37843816.
  • "Horizontal Curves in Columbia University" (PDF). Architectural Record. Vol. 9. July–September 1899. pp. 82–93. (PDF) from the original on July 13, 2020.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • "Lavish Gifts to Columbia: Seth Low's Munificence to Pay for the College Library, Which Will Cost About $1,000,000". New-York Tribune. May 17, 1895. pp. 1, 3. ProQuest 574046076.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • "Libraries of the United States – II". American Architect and Architecture. Vol. 77. American Architect. July 26, 1902. pp. 28–29. from the original on October 9, 2021.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Low Memorial Library (Report). National Register of Historic Places, National Park Service. December 23, 1987. from the original on September 8, 2021.
  • Low Memorial Library Interior (PDF) (Report). New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. February 3, 1981. (PDF) from the original on December 23, 2019.
  • Passanti, Francesco (April 1, 1977). "The Design of Columbia in the 1890s, McKim and His Client". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. University of California Press. 36 (2): 69–84. doi:10.2307/989104. ISSN 0037-9808. JSTOR 989104.
  • Rider, Fremont; Cooper, F.T. (1923). Rider's New York City: A Guide-book for Travelers, with 13 Maps and 20 Plans. Rider's guides. H. Holt. pp. 361–362. from the original on September 24, 2021.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Roth, Leland (1983). McKim, Mead & White, Architects. Harper & Row. ISBN 978-0-06-430136-7. OCLC 9325269.
  • Stern, Robert A. M.; Gilmartin, Gregory; Massengale, John Montague (1983). New York 1900: Metropolitan Architecture and Urbanism, 1890–1915. New York: Rizzoli. ISBN 0-8478-0511-5. OCLC 9829395.
  • Stoller, Michael (Autumn 1996). "Columbia's Library For the Twentieth Century: The Rise of South Hall". Library Columns. Vol. 45. pp. 4–17. from the original on May 12, 2017.
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External links

  • by the School of General Studies

memorial, library, nicknamed, building, center, columbia, university, morningside, heights, campus, manhattan, york, city, united, states, building, located, near, 116th, street, between, broadway, amsterdam, avenue, designed, charles, follen, mckim, firm, mck. The Low Memorial Library nicknamed Low is a building at the center of Columbia University s Morningside Heights campus in Manhattan New York City United States The building located near 116th Street between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue was designed by Charles Follen McKim of the firm McKim Mead amp White The building was constructed between 1895 and 1897 as the university s central library although it has contained the university s central administrative offices since 1934 Columbia University president Seth Low funded the building with 1 million equivalent to 33 million in 2021 and named the edifice in memory of his father Abiel Abbot Low Low s facade and interior are New York City designated landmarks and the building is also designated as a National Historic Landmark Low Memorial LibraryU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkNYC Landmark No 0304 1118Location in ManhattanLocationCampus of Columbia University New York CityCoordinates40 48 30 N 73 57 43 W 40 80833 N 73 96194 W 40 80833 73 96194 Coordinates 40 48 30 N 73 57 43 W 40 80833 N 73 96194 W 40 80833 73 96194Built1894 1897 1 ArchitectCharles Follen McKim of McKim Mead and White 1 Architectural styleNeoclassicalNRHP reference No 87002599NYCL No 0304 1118Significant datesAdded to NRHPDecember 23 1987 4 Designated NHLDecember 23 1987 4 Designated NYCLExterior September 20 1966 2 Rotunda interior February 3 1981 3 Low is arranged in the shape of a Greek cross Three sets of stairs on the library s south side lead to a colonnade with a frieze describing its founding The steps contain Daniel Chester French s sculpture Alma Mater a university symbol The library is four stories tall excluding a ground level basement The building s raised first floor has an entrance vestibule as well as an ambulatory around an octagonal rotunda which leads to offices on the outer walls The rotunda contains a sky blue plaster dome and four Vermont granite columns on each of its four sides The library s stacks could store one and a half million volumes the east wing hosted the Avery Architectural Library and the north wing hosted Columbia s law library The library was built as part of Columbia University s Morningside Heights campus which was developed in the 1890s according to a master plan by McKim When Low Library was completed it was poorly suited for library use becoming overcrowded from the early 20th century Low s central location however made it a focal point of the university s campus Following the completion of the much larger Butler Library in 1934 the Low Memorial Library was converted to administrative offices Contents 1 Site 1 1 Low Library steps 2 Architecture 2 1 Form 2 2 Facade 2 3 Features 2 3 1 Vestibule president s room and trustees room 2 3 2 Ambulatory 2 3 3 Rotunda 2 3 4 Other stories 3 History 3 1 Development 3 1 1 Planning 3 1 2 Construction 3 2 Use as a library 3 2 1 Early years 3 2 2 Overcrowding 3 3 Administrative offices 4 Impact 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Sources 7 External linksSite EditLow Memorial Library is at the center of Columbia University s Morningside Heights campus in Manhattan New York City 5 6 1 The building s official address is 535 West 116th Street though the section of 116th Street between Broadway to the west and Amsterdam Avenue to the east is part of the private College Walk 7 Low is raised above the northern portion of the campus which itself is a terrace above the South Court to the south 8 The library building occupies the highest point of the original campus 9 10 The building is surrounded by Miller Theatre and Lewisohn Hall to the southwest Earl Hall to the west Mathematics and Havemeyer Halls to the west Uris Hall to the north Schermerhorn Avery and Fayerweather Halls to the northeast St Paul s Chapel to the east and Buell Philosophy and Kent Halls to the southeast 11 Earl Hall and St Paul s Chapel are both designed along the same west east axis as Low 12 This arrangement is part of McKim Mead amp White s design for the campus 13 Low Library steps Edit The stairs leading to Low are a popular meeting area for Columbia students and are also used for commencements speeches and other events Two flights of steps connect the terrace to the South Court 14 the library proper is approached by another flight above the terrace 15 Known as the Steps Low Steps and occasionally Low Beach they are a popular meeting area for Columbia students 16 They also serve as a connection between the northern and southern sections of Columbia s campus 17 One 325 to 327 ft 99 to 100 m wide flight leads from the South Court to an intermediate landing and a narrower 134 to 140 ft 41 to 43 m leads from the intermediate landing to the terrace 18 The narrower flight itself has an intermediate landing 17 containing Alma Mater a sculpture by Daniel Chester French 19 that depicts a woman personifying the traditional image of the university as an alma mater 20 Hidden in the statue s leg is an owl symbolizing knowledge and learning according to college superstition the first member of the incoming class to find the owl will become class valedictorian 21 20 The centers of the stairs are slightly curved upward to remove the impression they were sagging 22 As a result the center of each step is about 3 5 in 8 9 cm taller than the extreme ends 23 Smaller sets of staircases connect the intermediate landing to passages at terrace level on the west and east 15 Architecture critic Paul Goldberger said of the steps in 1987 The building itself for all the power of its immense scale and huge dome seems almost to recede deferring to the stairs before it 17 During commencement speeches Columbia s graduation mace is customarily carried down the stairs 24 The stairs have been used for other speeches such as a 1991 speech by novelist Salman Rushdie after the Iranian government targeted him for assassination 25 Architecture Edit South elevation from the upper stories of Butler Library The Low Memorial Library was designed by Charles Follen McKim of McKim Mead amp White and was built between 1894 and 1897 1 26 27 McKim was assisted in the design by William M Kendall Austin W Lord and Egerton Swartwout 28 The library was designed in the Neoclassical style incorporating many elements of Rome s Pantheon 29 and Baths of Caracalla 30 It was funded by Seth Low the president of Columbia University and later the mayor of New York City in memory of his father Abiel Abbot Low 31 Form Edit Low is arranged in the shape of a Greek cross is aligned with the Manhattan street grid and contains beveled corners The main walls of the building s Greek cross correspond to the four cardinal directions 32 The cross has a maximum width of 192 ft 59 m 33 10 The Greek cross layout had previously been used in several libraries including the main library of New York University NYU s Bronx campus now Gould Memorial Library on the campus of Bronx Community College that was designed by McKim s colleague Stanford White 34 Low s arrangement like that of Gould s is partly inspired by those of the Library of Congress and the British Library Unlike these other libraries Low was designed to face away from much of the campus that was designed around it 35 The building is topped by a round dome 36 made of brick which is clad on the outside with limestone and on the inside with steel framing and plaster 37 The dome has a radius of 52 ft 16 m and has a maximum thickness of 48 in 120 cm at the bottom tapering to 9 in 23 cm at the pinnacle 38 The steel frame under the dome is made of two 1 in 2 5 cm thick and 12 in 30 cm wide steel bars The ceiling of the rotunda beneath is a false ceiling that hangs about 16 ft 4 9 m below the inner face of the dome 39 Otherwise the dome is made of stone that is designed to be self supporting 10 39 The dome was inspired by the Rotunda the main library designed by Thomas Jefferson at the University of Virginia and is also less directly evocative of the dome above the Pantheon 40 Facade Edit Frieze inscription The 12 ft 3 7 m high base of Low is made of granite 41 An 86 ft 26 m wide staircase with 22 33 or 26 steps 15 leads from the terrace to the main entrance portico on the building s south facade The highest step the stylobate of the portico corresponds to the top of the base 15 The entrance portico consists of an Ionic style colonnade of ten columns supporting a cornice and attic 36 Each of the columns is 35 ft 11 m tall 42 and has a diameter of 4 ft 1 2 m 33 The frieze above the columns reads Library of Columbia University 43 An inscription above the colonnade describes the university s founding 6 It reads 44 King s College Founded in the Province of New York By Royal Charter in the Reign of George II Perpetuated as Columbia College by the People of the State of New York When They Became Free and Independent Maintained and Cherished from Generation to Generation For the Advancement of the Public Good and the Glory of Almighty God 44 The building was designed with 150 windows the smallest of which measures 10 by 4 ft 3 0 by 1 2 m 45 The upper section of the facade is clad in limestone 46 in contrast with the surrounding buildings which are generally made of brick with limestone trim 47 The west north and east walls are designed with pilasters similar in design to the colonnade the pilasters flank windows that are deeply set into the facade The corners of the Greek cross also have deeply set windows The roof of the Greek cross s arms is about 70 ft 21 m above the ground level of the terrace 15 Above the top of the cross Low s walls which rise to 100 ft 30 m above the surrounding terrace are arranged as an octagonal drum supporting the dome 15 Each of the four main walls have large half round windows 36 that are either 44 or 50 ft 13 or 15 m across and 22 ft 6 7 m high 15 45 and are evocative of the lunettes atop the Baths of Caracalla 48 The top of the dome is around 135 ft 41 m above terrace level 10 15 and 152 ft 46 m above the grade of what was formerly 116th Street 15 Features Edit Low has four stories The ground level is a raised basement while the first floor is one story above ground 49 The first floor s interior consists of an entrance vestibule on the south side of the building that leads to an ambulatory surrounding a central rotunda 50 Low s first floor shares design influences with the reading room at the Library of Congress s Thomas Jefferson Building the Administration Building at the World s Columbian Exposition and the nearby Grant s Tomb 51 The second floor had a gallery on the south arm and the closed stacks on the north east and west arms The third floor was devoted entirely to lecture rooms 15 The library s stacks were built to store one and a half million volumes Graduate students used the open stacks and adjacent small reading rooms while undergraduates could use only the closed stacks using the rotunda as a central reading room 52 Eighteen small reading rooms were provided 53 Elmer E Garnsey was hired to create the library s interior color scheme 54 As of 2010 update the exhibition space in the building is open to the public from 9 00 a m to 5 30 p m 26 Columbia students staff and faculty can book the spaces on the first floor for events 55 a Vestibule president s room and trustees room Edit Trustees room Low s main entrance contains bronze and glass entrance doors leading to a double height vestibule 56 measuring 30 by 33 ft 9 1 by 10 1 m 44 The original doors were made of oak McKim had proposed bronze doors be used but Low rejected the doors as out of harmony with our ideals and with the ideals of my father 57 At the entryway are bronze busts of Zeus and Apollo 58 The vestibule has a marble floor with red rust beige and gray panels in an octagonal arrangement 59 George W Maynard sculpted eight panels with bronze reliefs depicting the twelve zodiac signs 58 the panels were manufactured by John Williams and displayed at the World s Columbian Exposition after which they were donated to Columbia University 57 The vestibule contains a white marble bust of Pallas Athena which is modeled after Minerve du Collier at the Louvre 60 Oak doors on the west and east link to sets of four marble steps which connect to the former offices of the president and the trustees respectively 56 Above these doors are stone architraves with molded leaf and dart motifs and lintels with paneling On either side of the doors are double height limestone pilasters with gilded capitals 61 Several portraits were hung in each room 44 The trustees room to the east was decorated by the Herter Brothers with oak paneling 57 The center of the trustees room has a Georgian style fireplace mantel which contains a broken pediment holding an iron crown from King s College the predecessor of Columbia University The mantel has a cornerstone from King s College s original building and a portrait of the college s founding president Samuel Johnson 62 The rest of the vestibule s walls have plaster panels bordered by green and gold acanthus leaf motifs and band courses with Greek fretwork Each corner of the vestibule has a pilaster similar to those flanking the west and east doors as well as a wrought iron lamp The south wall has a narrow balcony illuminated by a lattice of crossbars the north wall is a double window above a set of four steps leading to the rotunda Laurel leaves and medallions divide the vestibule s ceiling into nine coffers 61 The central coffer has a bronze lantern above the Pallas Athena bust 63 Ambulatory Edit The ambulatory is an octagonal hallway around the rotunda 64 consisting of alternating long and short passages the long passages correspond to the cardinal directions while the shorter passages correspond to the intercardinal directions 61 The floor has alternating marble squares and circles that are laid in hues of red yellow and black and white 65 At the floor s center is a bronze bas relief of the university s seal 61 The walls of the long passages have Doric style limestone pilasters and orange plaster panels bordered by leaf motifs and band course like those in the vestibule There are also oak panels that correspond to the rotunda s former bookcases 61 The south hallway contains a pair of green double height Connemara marble columns that screen it from the entrance vestibule 66 The columns each of which weighs 25 short tons 22 long tons 23 t were quarried from the largest blocks of Connemara marble available when the library was built 33 The ceiling of the south hallway is divided into five coffers and a bronze lamp hangs from the outermost coffer on either side The west north and east hallways have similar ceilings but are illuminated by three bronze lanterns 61 The north hall has a balcony while the south and east halls have gates to the rotunda 67 Offices and additional libraries surrounded the ambulatory 68 At the center of the outer walls of the west north and east hallways are double wooden doors that lead to offices 61 Formerly these doorways led to catalogue and specialized libraries 69 The doors on the east hall led to the Avery Architectural Library while the north hall s doors led to the law library 70 The Avery Architectural Library s ceiling beams bore inscriptions of architects names 54 The west hall s doors led to the administrative offices 15 and the west wing had contained the periodical catalogue and delivery rooms 71 The periodical room measured 61 by 37 ft 19 by 11 m and had a two story high ceiling There was also an exhibition room measuring 39 by 54 ft 12 by 16 m 72 Decoration in the short passages is simple The unornamented walls are made of plaster and have arched recessed doorways flanked by simple pilasters The halls have arched ceilings and are illuminated by bronze lamps on marble pedestals below which are lions heads and above which are glass globes Staircases rise to the upper levels which are adjacent to each of the short sections of the ambulatory 73 Rotunda Edit Underside of dome Seen c 1900 1910The building was later converted to administrative use and the rotunda became a ceremonial space The center of Low s first floor contains an octagonal rotunda the library s former reading room 56 The rotunda has four long walls corresponding to the cardinal directions and four short walls corresponding to the intercardinal directions b The reading room contained circular tables each of which was lit by a reading lamp 74 The reading room s seats were arranged in four concentric rings 75 Four columns adjoined a reference desk at the center of the rotunda Above the columns was a decorative iron structure topped by a four sided clock with a bronze sculpture of an eagle 76 Each of the rotunda s main walls include four Vermont granite columns with gilt bronze Ionic style capitals that screen the rotunda from the ambulatory 77 Each column is 29 ft 8 8 m tall supporting a third story balcony 72 and each of the capitals weighs almost one ton 33 Vermont marble was chosen because it closely resembles Connemara marble which could not be used for the rotunda due to the scarcity of large pieces of that material 78 Bookcases rising to eye level were originally laced between the columns to give the impression of an enclosed space 79 Depictions of Roman and Greek luminaries Demosthenes Euripides Sophocles and Augustus Caesar are placed on the balcony along the north wall 80 McKim personally funded he figure of Euripides 81 Twelve figures were planned for the other walls but these figures were never built 82 The corners of the rotunda have large limestone piers that serve as pendentives for the rotunda s ceiling the piers contain gold circles and have internal ducts 83 Inscriptions of the medieval sciences Law Philosophy Medicine and Theology decorate the piers 84 The tops of the pendentives are beveled 85 The rotunda s piers also support vaults on each of the building s main walls which include half round windows 15 During daylight hours the lunette windows atop the walls provided sufficient illumination 86 The rotunda s ceiling is 105 5 ft 32 2 m tall and 73 ft 22 m across 87 The ceiling is a false dome made of plaster over steel mesh and is painted sky blue 88 The false dome s ribs are spaced four ft 1 2 m apart at the springing of the arches 39 A sphere that reflected light from eight spotlight beams on the room s third floor balconies at night was suspended from the ceiling 89 The globe was intended to resemble the moon 90 The sphere was seven ft 2 1 m across and hung from a steel one quarter in 6 4 mm thick wire giving the impression it floated in midair 91 It is not known whether the spotlights were ever used for their intended purpose but the sphere has since been removed 92 Other stories Edit A sub basement contained heating and ventilating apparatus and a storage room 10 There are doors at each of the basement s four corners 93 When the Low Memorial Library was operating as a library students generally used these doors to enter the building because they were convenient entrances from the campus grounds 75 The basement had cloak rooms the office of superintendent of buildings and grounds a sub post office a telegraph office telephone booths 44 It also contained a portion of the stacks 94 which could store 150 000 volumes 76 A separate stack room served the law library in the north wing to which it was connected by stairs 95 The law library occupied the entire north wing and the north side of the second story contained law collections The east side had social sciences collections with the Columbiana collection on the northeast corner and modern language collections on the west side The south wing which is the top of the entrance vestibule has only a balcony 72 The third story balconies formerly held the open stacks 96 which were used by graduate students 85 The gallery stacks held 16 000 volumes 76 The third floor had history and philosophy collections offices workrooms 72 and 10 lecture halls 39 The layout of the second and third stories allowed different specialties to have seminar areas and private study rooms near the stacks corresponding to their subjects 97 History EditIn 1890 through his family s wealth and social connections Seth Low became Columbia University s president 98 The university s campus which at the time was in Midtown Manhattan 99 was quickly becoming cramped 98 In April 1892 Columbia University acquired the former site of the Bloomingdale Insane Asylum between Broadway Amsterdam Avenue and 116th and 120th Streets in Morningside Heights 99 The next month 100 Low hired Charles Follen McKim Charles C Haight and Richard Morris Hunt as consultants to plan a new campus on the newly acquired site 101 Low wanted the consultants to collaborate but the process became an architectural design competition in practice with each architect preparing multiple plans in different styles 102 In April 1893 the architects presented their findings to the trustees 103 Columbia ultimately hired McKim to design the new Morningside Heights campus in late 1893 104 105 McKim was a relatively inexperienced architect at the time but he had endowed a fellowship to the Columbia School of Architecture three years prior 106 Development Edit Planning Edit The final plan for Low Library published in Harper s Weekly in 1894 on the eve of the building s construction The center of the site was higher than its surroundings leading McKim to develop a classical style campus around the highest point 107 Columbia s trustees approved the first iteration of McKim s campus plan in April 108 or May 1894 the plan had a rectangular library building surrounded on either side by symmetrical rows of buildings 109 110 The library was to be built at the center of the campus facing south toward a main entrance on 116th Street there would also be a court to the north an assembly hall to the west and a chapel to the east 111 110 In this plan the pathways around the library were too narrow and the assembly hall library and chapel appeared to form a wall dividing the campus s north and south halves 109 Consequently the plans underwent further refinement through mid 1894 112 McKim working with his colleagues Kendall Lord and Swartwout considered circular and octagonal layouts for the library before deciding on a cruciform layout 113 In July 1894 McKim wrote to his partner William Rutherford Mead saying though the scheme for the Library has undergone many changes he and his colleagues had devised a suitable revised plan 114 The library would be placed on the site s highest point with a dome 300 ft 91 m above the water level of the nearby Hudson River and would be surrounded by the other buildings on campus 115 45 To make the library stand out McKim designed a grand stairway for the 116th Street frontage 45 116 The assembly hall and chapel were moved from the library to the west and east creating small courtyards on either side 117 Seth Low had contemplated whether the other buildings should be ornately decorated so the trustees could approve of the design but McKim believed the library should have a simple yet grand style 118 The trustees approved this proposal under which the library would cost 700 000 equivalent to 22 million in 2021 119 in November 1894 118 120 121 Later that month a model of the library was exhibited at the American Fine Arts Society 122 After plans for the library were approved the trustees received bids for the construction of the library and surrounding buildings 123 At the time Columbia had sufficient funds to construct a few buildings but not the library 31 In May 1895 the construction contract was awarded to Norcross Brothers 123 A few days after the construction contract was awarded 124 Seth Low donated 1 million equivalent to 33 million in 2021 119 to the library in memory of his father Abiel Abbot Low In exchange the library would be named the Low Memorial Library 125 126 The donation reportedly comprised a third of Seth Low s fortune 127 News media profusely praised the donation 31 which was reported for several days on the front pages of the city s newspapers 128 McKim thanked president Low for the donation If when the Library building shall be completed your confidence in our firm prove to not have been misplaced I shall regard the library one of the greatest happinesses of my life 31 Construction Edit Modern view of the rotunda Seth Low asked McKim to draw designs for a library with a facade of marble limestone or brick and limestone 129 The initial plans called for a marble facade but Low had been hesitant to use such an expensive material preferring instead to use brick for the library 130 McKim had wanted to use limestone a material with a monumental character 118 Construction had started by June 18 1895 131 Initial work included excavation of the library s foundation 132 Seth Low wished to hold a cornerstone laying ceremony in late 1895 but he postponed these plans after the groundbreaking for NYU s Gould Library that October he did not want to hold a similar event in such close succession 132 The Low Library s cornerstone was informally laid on December 7 1895 133 134 Construction of the library was delayed by disagreements over the dome s design 135 When the walls were being constructed McKim had planned to create the dome using concrete carried on iron trusses with limestone cladding 136 Columbia s architecture departmental head William Robert Ware argued such a design would not be a real dome 137 McKim then proposed a Guastavino tile dome to which Ware agreed The Norcross Brothers then proposed an un reinforced concrete dome they had planned themselves and McKim submitted plans to the New York City Department of Buildings DOB The DOB delayed issuing the permit until November 1895 likely in part because of the uncertainties over the new design 137 By then the architects feared cold weather would weaken the concrete forcing the dome to be deferred until the following spring Consequently the dome was made of brick with an inner surface of metal lath and plaster and a limestone exterior 138 The site of Columbia University s new campus was officially dedicated on May 2 1896 139 by which time work on the library was rapidly progressing 140 Seth Low had wanted all the library s columns to be made of Connemara marble but because of their large diameters only two columns of that size could be quarried with the material available NYU had purchased sixteen narrower Connemara marble columns for its own library its architect McKim s partner Stanford White boasted about how Columbia s library had been unable to secure the same material 141 Columbia s two Connemara marble columns were placed at the entrance to the vestibule where they were most prominent and Vermont marble was used for the rest 78 An issue about inscriptions for the exterior friezes which Low started to discuss at the end of 1896 arose 142 He devised some ideas for inscriptions during mid 1897 suggesting to McKim the inscriptions should describe Columbia s history 143 The Columbia trustees disagreed whether such inscriptions should be in English or Latin as well as their locations Ultimately they gave McKim permission only for the inscription above the main entrance 91 In June 1897 Columbia s existing library closed for three months for the relocation of the collection 144 Use as a library Edit Early years Edit Low Library was not yet complete when the new Columbia University campus opened on October 4 1897 145 The new Columbia University campus opened on October 4 1897 146 145 The opening was marked with a small ceremony in the library s reading room during which Seth Low announced his resignation 147 145 Low Library was not completed at the time the power plant and other mechanical systems were not in operation 145 and the final details were still being installed through 1898 148 From its opening the building served both as a library and as the university s administrative offices 53 The library could store 450 000 volumes in its stacks 149 Additional space on the third floor was being temporarily allocated to Columbia s political science and philosophy departments 10 which were expected to relocate to dedicated quarters some time in the future freeing space for another 600 000 volumes 149 University officials believed the new library was sufficient to accommodate the university s collection which in 1896 contained 215 000 volumes and was adding 12 000 volumes annually The campus had 1 353 students across all programs in 1898 and the library was expected to easily accommodate all these students 149 The collection grew much more quickly after the opening of the Morningside Heights campus reaching 300 000 volumes by 1900 150 The following year a university pamphlet said the library was open on weekdays between 8 30 a m and 11 00 p m and the library closed one hour earlier from July to September At the time the library had about 10 000 volumes in the general reading room and 310 000 bound volumes and many pamphlets in the stacks 53 The steps outside the library became a meeting area for Columbia undergraduates in the early years of the campus 151 In 1903 the Alma Mater sculpture was installed on the steps leading to the library 152 Overcrowding Edit Low Library c 1902 05 The collection was organized in a compartmentalized manner and departments expanded at different rates causing problems for the building s operation as a library 153 By 1902 Nicholas Murray Butler who had replaced Seth Low as university president was observing crowded conditions at the library 149 and according to American Architect magazine One or two utilitarian points have been rather sacrificed 154 In addition the calling of books from the stacks was difficult The 10 000 ft long 3 000 m pneumatic tube delivery system stopped working two weeks after it was installed and a dumbwaiter system had also broken down 76 The crowding increased in later years because the political science and philosophy departments did not move as scheduled and because of increased enrollment the university had 4 225 students by 1914 149 The overcrowding was slightly alleviated in 1910 when the law collection was relocated to the newly built Kent Hall 155 156 Avery Hall opened two years later 157 158 by then the Avery Architectural Library had also outgrown its space at Low 155 The increasing overcrowding led Columbia s newspaper to say in a 1924 article Library is a misnomer for an edifice designed for the benefit of sightseers 76 In a 1921 report Butler said Pressure upon the Library of the University has become such as well nigh to paralyze it 159 In that year s university s annual report Butler suggested a library could be created in University Hall completion of which had been delayed for years 159 A 1923 guidebook reported The room seats 152 readers 15 000 reference volumes arranged on the shelves The library contains in all about 835 000 volumes beside pamphlets manuscripts and 50 000 doctoral dissertations 72 The following August Charles C Williamson who was appointed Dean of the Columbia School of Library Service in 1926 160 wrote to Butler suggesting the creation of a new library 161 Williamson said in his letter A condition has been reached which threatens to hamper the growth and development of the University 162 Williamson suggested Columbia s library system needed space for at least four million volumes Low s rotunda had become overcrowded with a reference collection while the card catalogs could not be sufficiently accommodated in the building 161 Williamson began soliciting funds from philanthropist and Columbia alumnus Edward Harkness and he commissioned James Gamble Rogers to design a new library 163 Rogers s ambitious plan to complete University Hall also included a bridge and tunnel connecting it with Low 164 As part of this plan Low s north wing would have been gutted and replaced with a staircase leading to the bridge 165 The plan was never realized because large portions of University Hall would have had to be rebuilt to accommodate the weight of the books and the project was deemed too expensive 166 In December 1930 Butler asked Harkness to fund a new building on South Field facing Low from a site across 116th Street 167 Rogers devised a final design for South Hall now Butler Library in April 1931 168 The new library which Harkness agreed to fund that May would be able to hold four million volumes 169 170 Administrative offices Edit A commencement in front of Low Library 2005 The new South Hall was dedicated on November 30 1934 171 A giant slide was used to transport the 700 000 books 22 mi 35 km worth in Low s stacks to the new library 172 173 Low continued to host the president s and secretary s offices the summer session and the Columbiana and Rare Book Collections The rest of the building contained mostly faculty offices 76 Because people continued to refer to the building as Low Library some students were confused and believed the building still served as a library 174 In the first few years after the South Hall library was completed the Low building was used for events such as an exhibit of fine books 175 a show of Navajo art 176 and a display of rare religious art 177 Low was also used to host large ceremonies with notable guests of honor 76 174 including George VI and Queen Elizabeth of Britain who visited Low in 1939 178 179 as well as British prime minister Winston Churchill and Queen Juliana of the Netherlands 76 In 1948 the west wing of the first floor was renovated as an office for the General of the U S Army Dwight D Eisenhower when he became Columbia s president 180 Edmund Astley Prentis and his wife and sister donated a colonial style drawing room to Low Library in 1960 181 Four years later the north wing was turned into the Faculty Room a reception hall with oak paneling 182 The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission LPC designated Low as a city landmark in 1966 183 184 During the 1968 Columbia protests Low was occupied by students objecting to among other things the proposed construction of a university owned gymnasium in Morningside Park and Columbia s involvement with the Vietnam War 185 A major anti war protest also took place at Low in 1972 186 Among the less conventional uses of the library s interior the 1970s was a model airplane club being allowed to use the rotunda to fly miniature aircraft at weekends 187 The rotunda continued to host events like the annual Alfred I duPont Columbia University Awards for news broadcasters 188 The LPC designated the interior of the library s first floor as a city landmark in 1981 1 and the building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1987 as a National Historic Landmark 4 In 2001 Columbia began to renovate Low s roof and add new mechanical systems to plans by David Paul Helpern Associates The work was projected to cost 14 5 million equivalent to 22 2 million in 2021 119 and the installation of the new mechanical systems would enable Columbia officials to remove mechanical equipment from the roof At the time the building was still open to the public on weekdays from 9 00 a m to 5 00 p m 174 In the early 21st century Low continued to be the location of large events such as protests and rallies For example in 2016 students conducted a sit in and a sleep out to demand divestment from fossil fuel companies 189 and a chapter of Extinction Rebellion protested in the building in 2019 190 Impact Edit The 1954 Columbia University Bicentennial stamp depicts Low Library The Low Memorial Library was intended to symbolize Columbia s new campus and to serve as an administrative center 191 A 1995 article from the journal Library Columns said Low s cornerstone symbolizes the cornerstone of the entire campus not only architecturally but philosophically and philanthropically 118 Some early publications praised the design one source said the library is a utilitarian scheme artistically carried out 149 and another ranked the library among the foremost in the world 192 In 2010 the AIA Guide to New York City described Low Memorial Library as Columbia University s most noteworthy visual symbol and a dignified centerpiece for the campus 26 The Real Estate Record and Guide believing Low to have been patterned after a French church by the architect Rumpf criticized Low s design as plagiarized from the older church 174 193 Montgomery Schuyler who resented the fact the Columbia campus had not been designed in a Collegiate Gothic style wrote in 1910 the library of Columbia is a library de luxe and not de books citing a French friend 153 194 Architectural historian Richard Guy Wilson said The dome and space overpower while directional orientation to the necessities such as picking up a book are afterthoughts 195 According to Wilson Low s exterior has a powerful rude strength of classicism being reborn with refinement only in its architectural detail 195 The Low Memorial Library has appeared in several portrayals of Columbia University in popular culture including the 2005 film Hitch and the 2017 film The Post 196 The library building has also been depicted on postage In 1954 during the university s bicentennial Low was commemorated on a postage stamp 197 For the university s semiquincentennial in 2004 an image of the library was placed on a pre stamped postcard 198 See also EditList of libraries in 19th century New York City List of New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan above 110th Street National Historic Landmarks in New York City National Register of Historic Places listings in Manhattan above 110th StreetReferences EditNotes Edit According to Columbia University s website the Faculty Room Burden Room Rotunda and Trustees Room on the first story above ground are denoted as being on the second floor This considers the ground floor as the first floor 55 According to an 1898 Scientific American article the short diameter between the longer walls is 75 ft 23 m while the long diameter between the shorter walls was 85 ft 26 m 33 According to a 1923 guidebook the short diameter is 73 ft 22 m 72 Citations Edit a b c d e New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission Dolkart Andrew S Postal Matthew A 2009 Postal Matthew A ed Guide to New York City Landmarks 4th ed New York John Wiley amp Sons p 194 ISBN 978 0 470 28963 1 Low Memorial Library PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission September 20 1966 Archived from the original PDF on August 3 2012 Retrieved January 17 2015 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 1 a b c National Register of Historic Places Weekly Lists for 1988 January September PDF National Park Service 1988 p 3 Retrieved July 20 2020 Maps amp Directions Columbia University Libraries Archived from the original on June 18 2021 Retrieved September 23 2021 a b National Park Service 1987 p 2 Building Information Columbia University Facilities Archived from the original on June 13 2021 Retrieved September 23 2021 Dolkart 1998 pp 132 133 Passanti 1977 p 78 Scientific American 1898 p 200 New York Tribune May 17 1895 p 1 Roth 1983 pp 188 189 a b c d e f The New Library Building at Columbia University New York Scientific American Building Edition Vol 23 no 3 March 1 1897 p 37 ProQuest 88783522 Maps and Directions Morningside Heights PDF Visitors Center Columbia University August 7 2015 Archived PDF from the original on January 16 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 409 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 3 Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 409 Architectural Record 1899 p 86 National Park Service 1987 p 2 a b c d e f g h i j k l New York Tribune May 17 1895 p 3 Dober Richard P The Steps at Low Library PDF Dober Lidsky Craig and Associates Inc Archived from the original PDF on August 14 2011 Retrieved April 11 2011 a b c Goldberger Paul August 7 1987 New York City Out of doors Cavorting on the Great Urban Staircases The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 4 2017 Retrieved September 25 2021 Architectural Record 1899 p 86 New York Tribune May 17 1895 p 3 Dolkart 1998 p 133 National Park Service 1987 p 2 a b Durante Dianne 2007 Outdoor Monuments of Manhattan a Historical Guide New York New York University Press p 230 ISBN 978 0 8147 1986 2 OCLC 70839780 Richman Michael 1983 Daniel Chester French An American Sculptor Washington D C Preservation Press pp 90 96 ISBN 978 0 89133 048 6 OCLC 9044452 Architectural Record 1899 p 82 Roth 1983 p 195 Architectural Record 1899 p 86 An Old Tradition for New Graduates Columbia News April 16 2021 Archived from the original on April 20 2021 Retrieved September 25 2021 Daniels Lee A May 14 1992 Commencement President of Columbia Recalls Rushdie s Plight The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 15 2018 Retrieved September 25 2021 a b c White Norval Willensky Elliot Leadon Fran 2010 AIA Guide to New York City 5th ed New York Oxford University Press pp 496 497 ISBN 978 0 19538 386 7 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 3 Dolkart 1998 p 126 Roth 1983 p 192 Dolkart 1998 p 127 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 3 Dolkart 1998 p 127 a b c d Dolkart 1998 p 138 Broderick 2010 p 396 Dolkart 1998 p 127 National Park Service 1987 p 2 Wilson 1983 p 177 a b c d e f Scientific American 1898 p 200 Dolkart 1998 p 128 Roth 1983 p 188 Town Hall PDF New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission August 11 1981 p 6 Archived PDF from the original on September 25 2021 Retrieved January 1 2021 a b c Dolkart 1998 p 127 National Park Service 1987 p 2 Dolkart 1998 p 147 Roth 1983 p 194 Scientific American 1898 p 200 Scientific American 1898 pp 200 202 a b c d Scientific American 1898 p 202 Dolkart 1998 pp 127 128 Roth 1983 p 193 Dolkart 1998 p 139 New York Tribune May 17 1895 p 3 Scientific American 1898 p 200 New York Tribune May 17 1895 p 3 Scientific American 1898 p 200 Rider amp Cooper 1923 p 361 Scientific American 1898 p 200 a b c d e Rider amp Cooper 1923 p 361 a b c d Plans of the New Columbia President Low Tells of the Twelve Buildings Needed The New York Times October 31 1894 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 23 2021 Retrieved September 23 2021 Dolkart 1998 p 139 Roth 1983 pp 193 194 Scientific American 1898 p 200 Dolkart 1998 p 139 Roth 1983 pp 193 194 Dolkart 1998 p 128 New York Tribune May 17 1895 p 3 Rider amp Cooper 1923 p 361 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 pp 5 6 Passanti 1977 pp 78 79 Passanti 1977 p 79 Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 406 Passanti 1977 p 78 a b c Columbia University 1901 Columbia University Kings College founded in the province of New York by royal charter in the reign of George II perpetuated as Columbia College Knickerbocker Press p 3 Retrieved September 24 2021 via Internet Archive a b Dolkart 1998 p 146 a b Low Library PDF Columbia University Archived PDF from the original on May 16 2022 Retrieved September 25 2021 a b c Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 5 National Park Service 1987 p 5 a b c Dolkart 1998 p 144 a b Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 5 Rider amp Cooper 1923 p 361 National Park Service 1987 p 5 Dolkart 1998 p 144 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 5 Rider amp Cooper 1923 p 361 a b c d e f g Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 5 Dolkart 1998 pp 144 145 Rider amp Cooper 1923 pp 361 362 Dolkart 1998 p 144 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 5 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 5 Passanti 1977 p 79 Dolkart 1998 p 146 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 5 Dolkart 1998 p 148 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 5 Rider amp Cooper 1923 p 361 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 pp 5 6 New York Tribune May 17 1895 p 3 Passanti 1977 p 79 Broderick 2010 p 396 Dolkart 1998 p 146 Passanti 1977 p 79 Dolkart 1998 p 146 New York Tribune May 17 1895 p 3 Scientific American 1898 p 200 American Architect 1902 p 28 Scientific American 1898 p 202 a b c d e f Rider amp Cooper 1923 p 362 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 6 Passanti 1977 p 81 Roth 1983 p 194 a b American Architect 1902 p 28 a b c d e f g h Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 4 Dolkart 1998 p 148 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 5 National Park Service 1987 p 5 a b Dolkart 1998 pp 147 148 Dolkart 1998 pp 145 146 Passanti 1977 p 81 Dolkart 1998 pp 405 406 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 6 Rider amp Cooper 1923 p 362 Dolkart 1998 pp 405 406 Broderick 2010 p 396 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 6 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 6 National Park Service 1987 p 5 Passanti 1977 p 79 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 6 National Park Service 1987 p 5 a b Passanti 1977 p 79 Dolkart 1998 p 149 Roth 1983 p 194 Scientific American 1898 p 202 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 6 National Park Service 1987 p 5 Rider amp Cooper 1923 p 362 Dolkart 1998 p 147 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 6 National Park Service 1987 p 5 Scientific American 1898 p 202 Dolkart 1998 p 149 Roth 1983 p 194 Broderick 2010 p 396 Dolkart 1998 p 149 Passanti 1977 p 81 a b Dolkart 1998 p 149 Dolkart 1998 p 406 American Architect 1902 p 28 Rider amp Cooper 1923 p 361 American Architect 1902 p 28 Dolkart 1998 p 151 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 4 American Architect 1902 pp 28 29 American Architect 1902 p 29 Landmarks Preservation Commission 1981 p 6 National Park Service 1987 p 5 Bergdoll 1995 p 19 a b Broderick 2010 p 392 a b Dolkart 1998 p 115 Roth 1983 p 190 Dolkart 1998 p 117 Broderick 2010 p 393 Dolkart 1998 p 117 Roth 1983 p 190 Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 405 Wilson 1983 p 172 Bergdoll 1995 pp 14 15 Broderick 2010 p 393 Dolkart 1998 p 118 Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 405 Dolkart 1998 p 119 Wilson 1983 p 172 Broderick 2010 p 394 Passanti 1977 p 73 Roth 1983 p 191 Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 405 Wilson 1983 p 173 Plans for the New Columbia Arrangement of Buildings at Riverside Heights The New York Times December 5 1893 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 23 2021 Retrieved September 23 2021 Broderick 2010 p 393 Broderick 2010 p 393 Roth 1983 pp 188 189 Wilson 1983 p 173 Bergdoll 1995 p 16 Passanti 1977 p 74 Roth 1983 p 191 a b Dolkart 1998 p 126 a b Columbia s New Home Beautiful Grounds and Buildings to Be Prepared on Cathedral Heights New York Tribune May 13 1894 p 27 ProQuest 573921617 Bergdoll 1995 p 16 Broderick 2010 p 395 Dolkart 1998 p 126 Wilson 1983 p 174 Dolkart 1998 pp 126 127 Roth 1983 p 191 Roth 1983 p 192 Bergdoll 1995 p 16 Dolkart 1998 p 127 Roth 1983 p 192 Dolkart 1998 pp 129 130 Dolkart 1998 p 129 Dolkart 1998 p 129 Passanti 1977 p 81 Roth 1983 p 193 a b c d Bergdoll 1995 p 17 a b c 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved April 16 2022 Columbia College s New Library Plans Approved by the Board of Trustees Gifts to the University The New York Times November 6 1894 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 23 2021 Retrieved September 23 2021 The Plans for the Library Accepted Meeting of the Columbia College Trustees for an Exhibition of the Models of the Proposed Buildings New York Tribune November 6 1894 p 8 ProQuest 573985764 Columbia Alumni Meet a Model of the Proposed New Library and Plans of Other Buildings Admired an Address by President Low New York Tribune November 17 1894 p 3 ProQuest 573979293 a b Roth 1983 p 397 New York Tribune May 17 1895 p 1 New York Tribune May 17 1895 p 1 Wilson 1983 p 174 Rich Gifts to Columbia President Low Gives 1 000 000 for the New Library The New York Times May 7 1895 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 23 2021 Retrieved September 23 2021 Passanti 1977 p 76 Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 406 Bergdoll 1995 pp 17 18 Dolkart 1998 p 139 Bergdoll 1995 p 17 Broderick 2010 p 395 Roth 1983 p 193 a b Dolkart 1998 pp 140 141 Columbia College s New Library the Cornerstone Informally Laid Addresses by President Seth Low and Bishop Potter The New York Times December 8 1895 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 23 2021 Retrieved September 23 2021 Columbia s New Library Private Ceremony of the Laying of the Cornerstone New York Tribune December 8 1895 p 5 ProQuest 574121816 Broderick 2010 p 396 Dolkart 1998 pp 146 147 Roth 1983 p 194 Dolkart 1998 pp 146 147 Roth 1983 p 194 a b Dolkart 1998 p 147 Dolkart 1998 p 147 Roth 1983 p 194 New Site of Columbia the University s Grounds Dedicated With Great Ceremony The New York Times May 3 1896 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 The New Columbia Rising New York Tribune April 19 1896 p 28 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 Broderick 2010 p 396 Dolkart 1998 p 147 Bergdoll 1995 p 20 Dolkart 1998 p 149 Bergdoll 1995 p 20 Removal of Columbia Library The New York Times June 5 1897 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 a b c d Columbia s Opening Day Seth Low s Resignation as President Referred to a Committee Until Nov 15 The New York Times October 5 1897 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 Bergdoll 1995 p 21 Dolkart 1998 p 153 Dolkart 1998 p 153 Bergdoll 1995 p 21 a b c d e f Dolkart 1998 p 151 Columbia s Library Notes on Some of the Rare and Interesting Books It Contains New York Tribune April 14 1901 p B7 ProQuest 571012879 Dolkart 1998 p 163 University Opens To day Columbia Daily Spectator September 23 1903 Archived from the original on July 20 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 a b Dolkart 1998 p 151 Stern Gilmartin amp Massengale 1983 p 406 American Architect 1902 p 29 a b Dolkart 1998 p 182 To Dedicate Kent Hall Prominent Lawyers to Speak at Columbia University Exercises The New York Times October 23 1910 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 Dolkart 1998 p 183 Avery Hall Opened Newest and One of Most Complete of Columbia s Buildings New York Tribune November 10 1912 p 11 ProQuest 575014911 a b Dolkart 1998 p 195 Faculty Selected for Library School Curriculum for Two Years of Graduate Study at Columbia Also Announced The New York Times June 21 1926 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 a b Stoller 1996 p 6 Dolkart 1998 p 195 Stoller 1996 p 6 Dolkart 1998 pp 195 196 Dolkart 1998 p 196 Stoller 1996 pp 6 7 Stoller 1996 p 7 Dolkart 1998 p 196 Dolkart 1998 p 196 Stoller 1996 p 11 Dolkart 1998 p 197 Stoller 1996 p 13 Harkness to Build Library at Columbia for 4 000 000 Books New Library to Be Built for Columbia University The New York Times May 18 1931 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 New Library Harkness Gift For Columbia Fund for Building to Hold 4 000 000 Books Revealed by Dr Butler Construction to Start Soon Part of South Field Quadrangle Plan Present Structure Gift of Seth Low To Be Used for Collections and Displays New York Herald Tribune May 18 1931 p 1 ProQuest 1114107338 New Library Is Dedicated At Columbia 900 Attend Ceremonies in South Hall 4 000 000 Gift of E S Harkness New York Herald Tribune December 1 1934 p 7 ProQuest 1243678651 Topics of The Times The New York Times August 25 1934 p 12 ISSN 0362 4331 ProQuest 101219644 Lan Lin January 20 2016 8 Things You May Not Know About Butler Library The Low Down Archived from the original on June 16 2021 Retrieved August 23 2021 a b c d Gray Christopher February 17 2002 Streetscapes Morningside Heights The Library That Crowned Columbia s Move North The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on June 10 2021 Retrieved September 23 2021 Fine Books Are Shown Exhibition Is Opened at Low Library at Columbia The New York Times February 5 1936 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 25 2021 Retrieved September 25 2021 To Show Navajo Paintings The New York Times February 15 1937 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 25 2021 Retrieved September 25 2021 To Show Religious Art Columbia Exhibition to Cover Primitive to Modern Worship The New York Times February 10 1941 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 25 2021 Retrieved September 25 2021 Descendants of Colonial Leaders to Greet Royalty at Columbia Today The New York Times June 10 1939 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 25 2021 Retrieved September 25 2021 Columbia Gives Students Place To See the King Will Admit Them to South Field Tomorrow as Royal Party Arrives at School New York Herald Tribune June 9 1939 p 12 ProQuest 1247099663 Columbia States Altering House For Eisenhower University s New President Also to Have New Offices in Low Memorial Library New York Herald Tribune February 8 1948 p 3 ProQuest 1324146213 Colonial Drawing Room Dedicated at Columbia The New York Times December 21 1960 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 25 2021 Retrieved September 25 2021 Decor Contrasts At Columbia Campus The Christian Science Monitor November 18 1964 p 16 ProQuest 510624697 2 Landmarks Designated at Columbia Daily News October 23 1966 p 685 Archived from the original on September 25 2021 Retrieved September 25 2021 Gramercy Park Area Given Historic Designation 50 Structures Included in Preservation District Gracie Mansion Also Picked as City Landmark The New York Times October 7 1966 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 25 2021 Retrieved September 25 2021 Schuessler Jennifer March 21 2018 At Columbia Revisiting the Revolutionary Students of 1968 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on August 7 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 Arnold Martin April 21 1972 Protest at Columbia Brings Suspension Of Classes Today The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 25 2021 Retrieved September 25 2021 Quindlen Anna March 7 1977 Flights of Fancy Take Wing in Low Library The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 25 2021 Retrieved September 25 2021 Fraser C Gerald February 7 1979 17 Win duPont Columbia Broadcast News Awards The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 18 2019 Retrieved September 25 2021 CDCJ ends eight day occupation of Low Library Columbia Daily Spectator April 22 2016 Archived from the original on January 8 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 Columbia students storm Low Library as part of Extinction Rebellion protest amNewYork October 11 2019 Archived from the original on March 29 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 Dolkart 1998 p 151 Wilson 1983 p 177 Columbia s New Library The American Lawyer Vol 5 no 12 December 1897 p 577 ProQuest 125707304 The quarrel between The Real Estate Record Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Vol 60 no 1529 July 3 1897 p 2 Archived from the original on September 25 2021 Retrieved September 25 2021 via columbia edu Schuyler Montgomery June 1910 Architecture of American Colleges IV New York City Colleges PDF Architectural Record Vol 27 p 447 Archived PDF from the original on July 16 2020 Retrieved September 24 2021 a b Wilson 1983 p 177 Joy Julia December 17 2020 Columbia in the Movies Columbia Magazine Retrieved August 13 2022 Stiles Kent B November 1 1953 Columbia University s Bicentennial Stamp First 1954 Issue The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 American Philatelic Association American Philatelic Society 2004 The American Philatelist American Philatelic Association p 383 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Retrieved September 24 2021 Sources Edit Bergdoll Barry Autumn 1995 Laying the Cornerstone of the New Columbia University Library December 7 1895 Library Columns Vol 44 pp 14 21 Archived from the original on June 23 2016 Broderick Mosette 2010 Triumvirate McKim Mead amp White Art Architecture Scandal and Class in America s Gilded Age Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 307 59427 3 OCLC 698447571 Columbia University Scientific American Vol 78 no 13 March 26 1898 pp 200 202 ISSN 0036 8733 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Dolkart Andrew S 1998 Morningside Heights A History of its Architecture and Development New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 07850 4 OCLC 37843816 Horizontal Curves in Columbia University PDF Architectural Record Vol 9 July September 1899 pp 82 93 Archived PDF from the original on July 13 2020 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Lavish Gifts to Columbia Seth Low s Munificence to Pay for the College Library Which Will Cost About 1 000 000 New York Tribune May 17 1895 pp 1 3 ProQuest 574046076 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Libraries of the United States II American Architect and Architecture Vol 77 American Architect July 26 1902 pp 28 29 Archived from the original on October 9 2021 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Low Memorial Library Report National Register of Historic Places National Park Service December 23 1987 Archived from the original on September 8 2021 Low Memorial Library Interior PDF Report New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission February 3 1981 Archived PDF from the original on December 23 2019 Passanti Francesco April 1 1977 The Design of Columbia in the 1890s McKim and His Client Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians University of California Press 36 2 69 84 doi 10 2307 989104 ISSN 0037 9808 JSTOR 989104 Rider Fremont Cooper F T 1923 Rider s New York City A Guide book for Travelers with 13 Maps and 20 Plans Rider s guides H Holt pp 361 362 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Roth Leland 1983 McKim Mead amp White Architects Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 430136 7 OCLC 9325269 Stern Robert A M Gilmartin Gregory Massengale John Montague 1983 New York 1900 Metropolitan Architecture and Urbanism 1890 1915 New York Rizzoli ISBN 0 8478 0511 5 OCLC 9829395 Stoller Michael Autumn 1996 Columbia s Library For the Twentieth Century The Rise of South Hall Library Columns Vol 45 pp 4 17 Archived from the original on May 12 2017 Wilson Richard Guy 1983 McKim Mead amp White architects Rizzoli ISBN 978 0 8478 0491 7 OCLC 9413129 Archived from the original on November 5 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Low Memorial Library Low Memorial Library information by the School of General Studies Portals Architecture National Register of Historic Places New York City Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Low Memorial Library amp oldid 1131530116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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