| Fall 2001 Issue |
Library of the Furture Boasts Latest TechnologyA student takes a break from reading to gaze out a picturesque, curved glass facade at a busy University Avenue, shade trees swaying in the breeze and the Morgantown skyline beyond. Nearby, another student types quietly on a laptop computer. A few feet away yet another student searches for a book among the many shelves while a fourth studies in a computer-equipped carrel. Welcome to the library of the future under construction at West Virginia University: a five-story, 124,000-square-foot brick building that will integrate four branch libraries under one roof and meet the technological needs of the 21st century. The new library sits in front of the Charles C. Wise Jr. Library on WVU's Downtown Campus; a glass-encased atrium with a skylight joins the two buildings.
"Libraries across the country are reinventing themselves," said Dean Frances O'Brien. "Our primary role remains that of a cultural repository for knowledge in books, journals and reference materials, but our means of making these materials available is changing thanks to the Internet. The new facility at WVU is at the forefront of this transformation - the library as both a quiet place to read and study and an on-line resource. "Wise Library, WVU's main library, was built in 1931 when we had 3,500 students and a collection of 300,000 volumes," O'Brien added. "Today, 10 libraries around campus provide 22,000 students with access to more than 1.4 million volumes. Wise has served WVU well, but providing for the needs of a new generation of students raised on technology demands that we upgrade our facilities." The new library will feature a primary service floor, complete with a circulation desk and reference materials; one floor for periodicals; two floors of stacks that will hold 348,000 books; and a multimedia floor that will house government documents, electronic classrooms, and rooms for viewing videos or holding teleconferences. Technology available to library users will include 180 computers, 35 media-equipped workstations and 32 wireless laptops.
Nowhere will the library's technology capabilities be more apparent than on the multimedia floor. There will be group study rooms with a 42-inch high-definition television screen, keyboard and Internet connections to allow users to participate in e-conferences, view films and prepare presentations. Internet and cable connections on this floor will enable the library to deliver live video, network news and digitized video archives through its web site. "It's a quantum leap from anything we've ever done before,"
said Dennis Newborn, head of library systems. Wise Library, meanwhile, will be restored as a quasi-cultural center, with space set aside for the West Virginia and Regional History Collection and WVU's art collections. The facility -- which will retain its original limestone facade -- will also house general book collections, "wired" reading rooms and offices. The downtown library complex made possible by the new construction and
renovations will consolidate library services now available in Wise, the
Chemistry Research Building, and Colson and White halls. Several rooms and galleries will bear the names of people who have already made substantial gifts to the campaign. They include the James V. and Ann Pozega Milano Reading Room, named for couple who met while attending WVU more than 60 years ago; and the James A. Robinson Reading Room, named for the former president of the WVU Foundation. The new library is one of four construction projects included in the first phase of WVU's facilities master plan, a 10-year campus renewal program totaling more than $250 million. Other projects include a $26 million office complex the University has been leasing from the WVU Foundation since June, a $34 million Student Recreation Center that opened in July and a $43 million Life Sciences Building scheduled to open in May 2002. |
|||||
|
Ex Libris is published quarterly by the WVU Libraries |
|||||