San Francisco Public Library
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The San Francisco Public Library is a public library system serving the city of San Francisco. Its main library is located in San Francisco's Civic Center, on Larkin Street at Grove.
The first public library of San Francisco officially opened in 1879, just 30 years after the California Gold Rush. Since then, it has moved several times. The first three branches were opened from 1888 to 1889, in the Mission, in North Beach, and in the Potrero Hill.
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[edit] Early history
In 1877 a residents' meeting was called by Andrew Smith Hallidie who advocated the creation of a public library for San Francisco. A board of trustees for the Library was created in 1878 through the Rogers Act, signed by Governor of California William Irwin, which also created a property tax to fund the Library project. The San Francisco Public Library opened in 1879 on Bush Street at Kearny Street and hired Albert Hart as the first librarian. In 1888 the Library moved to the Larkin Street wing of City Hall in Civic Center. In 1889 the Library became a Federal depository by nomination of Senator George Hearst.
[edit] New Main Library
Construction on the current Main Library began on March 15, 1993, and cost a total of $109.5 million. [1] The building was completed in 1995 and opened a year later on April 18, 1996. At over 376,000 square feet (35,000 square meter) and with six floors above ground and one below, the new library is more than twice as big as the building it replaced (which was damaged in the Loma Prieta earthquake of 1989, and was rebuilt as the new Asian Art Museum).
In 1996, many dollars were paid for the development of this library. The amount that the city put in was nearly $140 million. It had many new features, such as new and improved computer terminals which reached a large number of three hundred terminlas. Many more users, about 1100, could access the to the library's network using their personal computers. The most impressive of all was the huge branch that was developed especially for children.[citation needed]
Nonetheless, the Main Library has its critics. In October, 1996 author Nicholson Baker wrote a scathing article in The New Yorker about the weeding of books from the library as it moved to the new building. He was also critical about the elimination of the card catalog when the computerized catalog was introduced.[citation needed] Due to this negative publicity, the library released an official response to Nicholson's New Yorker article, criticizing his claims. Although it had those reviews, in its first year, the library visitations were nearly doubled to 2.1 million from the mere number of 1.1 million, not to forget the amount of library-card owners that nearly tripled. [2]
There has also been criticism in the local press that the airy and spacious atrium dramatically reduced the amount of floor space available for shelving the library's collection. [3]
[edit] Branches
As of 2007, the San Francisco Public Library has 27 branches. The newest branch to open in over 40 years is the Mission Bay Branch Library, which opened to the public in July 2006.
Those listed in italics are currently closed for renovation as part of the Branch Library Improvement Program. The dates listed indicate the year of opening.
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[edit] Trivia
- The picturesque interior of the Main Library was featured as the central branch of the Los Angeles Public Library in the 1998 film City of Angels.
- In the first volume of theTeen Titans (2003 - present) series graphic novel, Kid Flash reads every single book in the Main Library's collection in a matter of minutes, and is able to retain his memory of everything he had just read.
[edit] References
- ^ San Francisco Public Library/Other Facts about the Building. Retrieved on 2006-12-10.
- ^ San Francisco Public Library challenges accuracy of The New Yorker's "Author vs. the Library" (1996-10-11). Archived from the original on 1998-12-03. Retrieved on 2006-12-10.
- ^ "Cost of Redoing S.F. Main Library Put at $28 Million/Report notes lacks of shelf space", San Francisco Chronicle, 2000-01-05. Retrieved on 2006-12-10.
[edit] External links
- Official website of the San Francisco Public Library
- 125th Anniversary Timeline History of the library
- Friends of the San Francisco Public Library - advocacy group