Birmingham Central Library | |
---|---|
General information | |
Status | Demolished |
Type | Public library |
Architectural style | Brutalist |
Location | Chamberlain Square, Birmingham, England |
Coordinates | 52°28′49.07″N 1°54′17.17″W / 52.4802972°N 1.9047694°WCoordinates: 52°28′49.07″N 1°54′17.17″W / 52.4802972°N 1.9047694°W |
Construction started | April 1969 |
Completed | December 1973 |
Opening | 12 January 1974 |
Closed | 29 June 2013 |
Demolished | 2016 |
Cost | 4.7 million Pound sterling |
Owner | Birmingham City Council |
Height | 22.6 metres (74 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 8 |
Design and construction | |
Architect | John Madin |
Architecture firm | John Madin Design Group |
Structural engineer | Ove Arup & Partners |
Services engineer | R.W. Gregory & Partners |
Quantity surveyor | L.C. Wakeman & Partners |
Main contractor | Sir Robert McAlpine |
Birmingham Central Library was the main public library in Birmingham, England from 1974 until 2013. For a time the largest non-national library in Europe, it closed on 29 June 2013 and was replaced with the Library of Birmingham. The building was demolished in 2016, after 41 years, as part of the redevelopment of Paradise Circus by Argent Group. Designed by architect John Madin in the brutalist style, the library was part of an ambitious development project by Birmingham City Council to create a civic centre on its new Inner Ring Road system; however, for economic reasons significant parts of the masterplan were not completed and quality was reduced on materials as an economic measure. Two previous libraries occupied the adjacent site before Madin’s library opened in 1974. The previous library, designed by John Henry Chamberlain, opened in 1883, and featured a tall clerestoried reading room. It was demolished in 1974 after the new library had opened.
Despite the original vision not being fully implemented the library gained architectural praise as an icon of British Brutalism with its stark use of concrete, bold geometry, inverted ziggurat sculptural form and monumental scale. Its style was seen at the time as a symbol of social progressivism. Based on this, English Heritage applied but failed twice for the building to gain listed status. However, due to strong opposition from Birmingham City Council the building gained immunity from listing until 2016.
In 2010–11 Central Library was the second most visited library in the country with 1,197,350 visitors.
The first Central Library occupied a site to the south of Edmund Street and west of the Town Hall. The site had been acquired from the Birmingham and Midland Institute (BMI) in 1860 after the construction of their own building in 1857 on the corner of Paradise Street and Ratcliff Place. The BMI building was to include a library, but under the Public Libraries Act 1850 a referendum took place on the creation of a municipal library. After the first vote failed, a second one passed in 1860 causing the BMI and the Corporation to cooperate on the joint site.