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Project spotted at architechnophilia. Click
on images at left for larger color views. [Google Earth link]
This project for New Reading Rooms at the Pontifical
Lateran University in Rome, Italy by King
Roselli Architetti was intended to "bring the activity
of reading and the consultation of books as the central occupation
of the university." The importance of books in study
at the university can be found in the numbers: 600,000 volumes
total, including 25,000 antique books and 750 publications,
primarily dealing with philosophy, theology, and canonic law.
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Most of the volumes, and all
of the antique books, are now located in climate-controlled
spaces underground, separate from the new reading rooms. The
reading rooms were previously scattered about the university,
though now they're contained in the new addition, with direct
access to 70,000 volumes and the publications. The addition
is explicitly a new and unique volume, sited adjacent to lecture
halls and the main university entrance, a reiteration of the
importance of books in studies. |
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The external form is both expressively
dramatic and functional. While the volume is clad in a brick
similar to the existing neighbors, it obviously veers from
them in the articulation of glazing, in tapered horizontal
bands that hint at the network of floors behind the façades.
According to the architects, "The library is arranged
so that for every two floors of book stacks one sloping
ramp, "U" shaped in plan, connects
them." This sloping ramp
is what's expressed on the exterior. |
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Furthermore, "The book stacks
are as low as possible...[and] are made to look like a set
of bookshelves themselves...an
interior façade of bookshelves facing the reading ramps
dedicated to publications...[forms] in effect a book
tower." The orientation of reading
rooms towards the stacks, and the inspired use of book
storage for the interior treatment of the spaces and the display
of publications are perhaps the strongest expressions of the
recurring idea of the importance of books, without being obvious
or derivative. Its expression on the outside -- again, lacking
obviousness or derivation -- gives the library a fitting home
at the university.
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Pontifical Lateran University in Rome, Italy
by King Roselli Architetti |
2007.06.18 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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