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Weston Library

Weston Library
Weston Library Exterior by John Cairns 20.3.15-27.jpg
View of the library building.
Country United Kingdom
Type Academic library
Established 2015 (2015)
Location Broad Street, Oxford
Collection
Items collected Books, journals, newspapers, magazines, sound and music recordings, maps, prints, drawings and manuscripts
Access and use
Access requirements By reader card for the library itself. The Blackwell Hall, two exhibition rooms, a gift shop, and cafe are open to the public.
Members Students and fellows of University of Oxford
Website bodleian.ox.ac.uk/weston

The Weston Library is part of the Bodleian Library, the main research library of the University of Oxford, reopened within the former New Bodleian Library building on the corner of Broad Street and Parks Road in central Oxford, England.

From 1937 to 1940, Sir Giles Gilbert Scott worked on the New Bodleian Library, in Broad Street, Oxford. It is not generally considered his finest work. Needing to provide storage for millions of books without building higher than the surrounding structures, Scott devised a construction going deep into the earth, behind two elevations no higher than those around them. His biographer A. S. G. Butler commented, "In an attempt to be polite to these – which vary from late Gothic to Victorian Tudor – Scott produced a not very impressive neo-Jacobean design". A later biographer, Gavin Stamp, praises the considerable technical achievement of keeping the building low in scale by building underground, but agrees that aesthetically the building is not among Scott's most successful designs.Nikolaus Pevsner dismisses it as "neither one thing nor the other".

The building was constructed of Bladon stone with Clipsham dressings and was opened by King George VI. The Rockefeller Foundation donated 60% of the £1 million cost for the new library building. It included administrative and reading rooms, together with an 11-storey bookstack beneath the building. This was connected with the original Bodleian Library underground by an conveyor belt system for books. It is still possible to walk underground between the Radcliffe Camera and the new library building.


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