The Elmer Holmes Bobst Library, often referred to as Bobst Library or Bobst, is the main library at New York University. Located at 70 Washington Square South between LaGuardia Place and the Schwartz pedestrian plaza, across from the southeast corner of Washington Square Park, it is named after its benefactor, Elmer Holmes Bobst who gave six million dollars towards its ultimate completion and opening on September 12, 1973. Mr. Bobst was a leading figure in pharmaceuticals, public health, philanthropy, and a confidant of Richard Nixon. He was also a long time trustee at New York University.[1]
The library, built in 1972,[2] is the largest library at New York University and one of the largest academic libraries in the United States. Designed by Philip Johnson and Richard Foster,[2] the 12 story, ~39 500 m² (425 000 square feet) structure is the flagship of an eight-library, 4.5 million volume system that provides students and faculty members with access to the world's scholarship and serves as a center for the University community's intellectual life. Bobst Library houses more than 3.3 million volumes, 20 thousand journals, and over 3.5 million microforms; and provides access to thousands of electronic resources in the forms of licensed databases, e-journals and other formats both on-site and to the NYU community around the world via the Internet. The Library is visited by more than 6 500 users per day, and circulates almost one million books annually.
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Gifts from Mamdouha S. Bobst and Kevin Brine made possible a significant renovation of Bobst Library's Mezzanine, First Floor and two Lower Levels which was completed in 2005.
The library provided text computer terminals for catalog search in the library until the terminals were replaced by PCs with Internet access in 2008.
Bobst Library houses several distinct special collections departments, including the Fales Library, the Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Archives, and the University Archives of NYU. On the north side, on even floors, are large, double-height study rooms featuring floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Washington Square Park.
In late 2003, Bobst Library was the site of two suicides. In separate incidents, students jumped from the open-air crosswalks inside the library and fell to the stereogram patterned marble floor below. After the second suicide, NYU installed plastic windows on each level to prevent further jumping. In 2009 a third student jumped to his death from the tenth floor, apparently scaling the plexiglass barricade.[3]
Also in 2003, Bobst Library was in the news for being the home of a homeless student who took permanent residence at the Library since he could not afford student housing. This student received the nickname Bobst Boy and was profiled by the Washington Square News, NYU's daily student newspaper. Reaction amongst the student body was mixed. Some students cited his case as an example of the university's inability to fully meet its students' financial need.[4]