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Posted

I hope the real thing turns out better than the renderings:

 

Original Library (circa 1913):

lib1.jpg

 

Various Views of the Current Library (basically they just added a tower to the back of the original library):

 

lib6.jpg

 

lib4.jpg

 

lib.jpg

 

oval2.jpg

 

Renderings of the new library (circa 2008):

 

lib7.jpg

 

lib3.jpg

 

lib2.jpg

 

lib5.jpg

 

lib8.jpg

I personally like the renderings. The back addition is a huge improvement. Currently, the back portion sticks out like a sore thumb because it was the third addition I believe, and is just pure concrete. So anything new would be great for that part of the building. Too bad I will have graduated by the time this thing is done!!!

The library reminded me of the Cleveland Museum of Art in the sense that they slapped on additions without thinking about the way the interior space functioned.

It looks like they may be trying to remedy that.

I guess I like it, the Neil side wasn't anything special.

As long as it is going to retain its traditional look on the front (Oval) side, it's fine with me. Improvements to the interior are another story - they are long overdue. It's kind of scary and claustrophobia-inducing currently.

Someone please enlighten me

 

Is the second photo, with the statue, of the north or south side of the building?

 

Is the addition on the north or south side of the building?

 

------------

 

On another note, architectural renderings crack me up. It looks like the new library will be inhabited by ghosts.

Someone please enlighten me:

 

Is the second photo' date=' with the statue, of the north or south side of the building?

 

Is the addition on the north or south side of the building?

 

------------

 

On another note, architectural renderings crack me up. It looks like the new library will be inhabited by ghosts.[/quote']

 

I'm not following you here.

The statue (of Thompson) and the front of the library faces east towards High St. The addition (the book tower) was to the back of the original building (or going west towards the Olentangy).

 

At least with those photos I now, after all these years, now know what part was the original library and what parts were the additions. I could tell that the library was cobbled together over the years, but I could never make out parts came when.

I'll take it! And I walk past it everyday!

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

I get it - the building runs east and west, not north and south. I am not familiar with that area and I visualized it wrong.

 

The new glass facade faces west, so it should catch the afternoon sun.

The new glass front will look a lot like the new Page Hall which sits across the street from Hagerty Hall. I had my first class there (Psych 100) so I was a kind of sad to see them gut it, but the final result looks cool.

About Page Hall - I was happy that they were keeping the facade, but now that I see the big glass cube sticking out of the back I wonder why they bothered... it looks kind of silly to me :/

Page Hall gutted (summer 2003)

guttedpagefrontview.jpg

guttedpagefront.jpg

 

Recent pics from fall 2004:

pagefrontview.jpg

 

pagefront.jpg

 

The back:

pageback2.jpg

I've never seen the back of Page Hall...and you're right, the glass cube does look odd. The front of Page Hall looks awesome at night though. I had no idea Page Hall was built in 1904! I would have gone to class more often if I'd known that!

It must be obligatory to include a huge glass atrium in libraries nowadays. Vancouver & Salt Lake have similar designs, probably a host of others.

 

I've studied in libraries that had the older dark, cramped stacks as well as newer ones with the open floors. I'd have to say I enjoy the seclusion available in the former.

I think it looks good.

I will have to join the chorus and say that the rendering definitely looks very good. Much better than the renderings that were floated around among the public in early 2002.

 

 

There are many things about this expansion plan I like, but I particularly appreciate the decision to preserve the stacks tower, an infamous OSU landmark. The renovation of the tower is also something to look forward to, considering that it has been a cramped, underappreciated space (with a killer view of the Columbus skyline) for far too long.

 

I suppose Oxley would be proud:

oxley.jpg

  • 3 months later...
  • 4 months later...

From the 7/18/05 Columbus Business First:

 

 

Library overhaul poised to get state money for OSU

Jeff Bell, Business First

 

A new list of priority construction projects at Ohio State University shows there will be winners and losers in the tussle for its limited amount of development dollars from the state.  The $100 million renovation of the Thompson Library, the Columbus campus' academic centerpiece, is being targeted by university leaders as the biggest recipient of state capital money.

 

Read more at http://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/stories/2005/07/18/story8.html?from_rss=1

 

I'm glad they are renovating the tower. Not only is it underappreciated, and not only does it have a really good skyline view, but I know that a lot of new students (including myself last year) that thought it was off limits! I seriously didn't know that students were even allowed up there until fall quarter this year.

I'm glad they are renovating the tower. Not only is it underappreciated, and not only does it have a really good skyline view, but I know that a lot of new students (including myself last year) that thought it was off limits! I seriously didn't know that students were even allowed up there until fall quarter this year.

 

For a time, only library employees were allowed in the tower (don't know when that policy ended. 1970s? 1980s?)

I think OSU finally took out the old peumatic (sp) tubes, for moving books, from the towers in the last 2 years.  I noticed them when I first arrived at main campus in 1999.

  • 6 months later...

From Business First of Columbus, 2/13/06:

 

 

OSU looks for read on library

Two key deadlines for $100M renovation coming near

Jeff Bell Business First

 

Ohio State University officials are eager to proceed with a $100 million overhaul of the William Oxley Thompson Library, but financial uncertainties still cloud the project's timetable.  At the heart of the matter is whether Ohio State can meet a fundraising target by May and develop a contingency plan should state funding for the project be delayed.

 

OSU Director of Libraries Joseph Branin told university trustees this month the goal is to seek construction bids in May and begin work on the 93-year-old campus landmark this fall. Three years of construction would follow, with the library reopening in mid-2009.  To meet that schedule, however, the university must land $5 million more in philanthropic support for the project by May, Branin said. That would boost pledges to $20 million, two-thirds of the $30 million goal.

 

The other $70 million will come from the state. OSU will receive $12 million of that total in the current fiscal year, but it is unclear when state legislators will approve a capital appropriations bill for fiscal 2007 and 2008, including the remaining $58 million the school is counting on for the library.

 

Read more at http://columbus.bizjournals.com/columbus/stories/2006/02/13/story1.html

  • 4 months later...

Since I venture to this part of the forum about as much as I venture to NYC (re: almost never), someone will have to tell me if you've started a thread on this topic already.

 

BTW, Is the Map (Collection) Room being sent to the Science & Engineering Library as I last heard? They sure as hell don't have room to hold it over in Derby (with Geography).

 

http://www.dispatch.com/business-story.php?story=dispatch/2006/07/02/20060702-G1-00.html

  • 2 weeks later...

From the 7/13/06 (OSU) Lantern:

 

 

Library to close in autumn

Librarians ready to move books to off-campus location

Abbey Wood

Issue date: 7/13/06 Section: Campus

 

Built in 1913, the William Oxley Thompson Memorial Library has had two renovations, and beginning in September, it will close for a three-year renovation.  To make this happen, the 1975 addition will be torn down. Two atria, one flanking the Oval and the other Neil Avenue, will be constructed. Meanwhile, the original portion of the building will be restored to its original beauty while the tower will remain the central part of the structure.

 

Read more at http://www.thelantern.com/media/storage/paper333/news/2006/07/13/Campus/Library.To.Close.In.Autumn-2131527.shtml?norewrite200607131917&sourcedomain=www.thelantern.com

 

  • 2 months later...

From the 9/26/06 (OSU) Lantern:

 

 

Main library gets temporary new home

Former Long's Bookstore to be used for temporary study space

Whitney Zorn

Issue date: 9/26/06 Section: Campus

 

The former location of Long's Bookstore on the corner of 15th Avenue and High Street opened as a new study space Monday.  The university is using it as an alternative spot for students to hit the books while the William Oxley Thompson Memorial Library, known as the Main Library, is closed for a three-year renovation.  "The first 10,000 square feet at the front of the building holds 150 seats," said Larry Allen, a spokesman for Ohio State libraries. "We plan to add wired computers and wireless access to the space."

 

Most of the materials from the Main Library have been moved west of campus to a temporary location at 600 Ackerman Road, and some are now at Sullivant Library at 1813 N. High St.  "We wanted to move materials and public service people first," Allen said. "Then we plan to move technical service people and administration out of the building by the middle of October."

 

The six-week long moving process is set for completion next week, he said. "As of now, we're moving on schedule," Allen said.

 

Read more at http://www.thelantern.com/media/storage/paper333/news/2006/09/26/Campus/Main-Library.Gets.Temporary.New.Home-2308527.shtml?norewrite200609281905&sourcedomain=www.thelantern.com

 

  • 6 months later...

From the 4/10/07 Lantern:

 

 

* PHOTO: Bryan Snyder, a project manager for the library demolition, looks down to the ground construction from the 6th floor of the William Oxley Thompson Library.  Media Credit: Shino Omura

 

Library reborn from rubble

Andrew Sharp

Issue date: 4/10/07 Section: Campus

 

A green wall of fencing spotted with "No Trespassing" signs wraps around a zone of destruction in the middle of campus, where one library is dying, and a new one is being born. More of the Thompson Library is hauled away each day, but project supervisor Ed Alford said more is happening behind those safety fences than sheer destruction.

 

He said the segment closest to the Recreation and Physical Activity Center that workers just knocked down was a newer addition built in the '70s. The workers avoided damaging the structure of the adjacent tower by making a cut to separate the two buildings. They were then able to knock down the entire newer structure. They were careful to avoid damage to the tower, especially to some of the original inscriptions the university wanted to preserve.

 

Read more at http://www.thelantern.com/media/storage/paper333/news/2007/04/10/Campus/Library.Reborn.From.Rubble-2832080.shtml

 

 

  • 10 months later...

A tradition that's all in the details

For nearly a century, the plaster grandeur of Ohio State's library has been in one family's hands

Monday, February 25, 2008 

By Kathy Lynn Gray THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

 

Four generations ago, when Ohio State University's main library was being built, plasterer Seth Lincoln Pymer gave the building's most spectacular room its pizazz.  Now, 95 years later, Seth Edward Pymer is revitalizing that pizazz inch by inch as he retraces his great-grandfather's work and restores the Grand Reference Hall's majesty.

 

While most of the William Oxley Thompson Memorial Library is being rebuilt to reflect 21st-century design, the Reference Hall will look the way it did when the Italian Renaissance Revival building opened in 1913.  When the four-year, $100 million renovation is complete, the hall's ceiling will once again stretch to 2 1/2 stories, bookcases will line the walls, long tables and hard-backed chairs will furnish the room, and ornate plasterwork will give it grace and style.

 

 

Pc0090900.jpg

The library's Grand Reference Hall, which opened

in 1913, was built in the Italian Renaissance Revival style. 

Many of the original details were destroyed when the hall

was split into two rooms in 1966.

 

 

Pc0091000.jpg

The Reference Hall is being restored to its original style,

including the ornate plasterwork on the walls and ceiling. 

Some of the original details near the ceiling have survived

the years intact.

 

 

2345640052_a7b2b66b21.jpg

Huge tubes control heat and humidity as a Pymer Plastering crew

works on the renovation of Ohio State University’s Thompson Memorial Library.

 

 

Read more at http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/local_news/stories/2008/02/25/PLASTERED.ART_ART_02-25-08_B1_OL9F004.html?sid=101

 

 

P.S.: It would probably be appropriate renaming this thread to "OSU Main Library Renovation".

"TUBULAR," one might say.

You got your wish.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

^Thanks.  Much appreciated ColDayMan.

 

Found the construction website for the Library Renovation at http://library.osu.edu/sites/renovation/. 

 

Its a pretty decent site with a webcam and tons of project renderings, plans, sections, info etc.  Here's a sampling...

 

3533594723_99eddfe131_o.jpg

 

3534412414_4668e06fe1_o.jpg

 

3533594839_9dd553b7e2_o.jpg

 

3534412554_d1bcb003f2_o.jpg

I love the Library!

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

  • 1 month later...

http://media.www.thelantern.com/media/storage/paper333/news/2008/04/07/Campus/Library.Project.Enters.PrePlanning.Phase-3307307.shtml?reffeature=htmlemailedition

 

Library project enters pre-planning phase

Jacob Donham, The Lantern

Issue date: 4/7/08

 

After its shut-down in September 2006, The William Oxley Thompson Memorial Library has been partially shrouded behind large fences covered with green tarps.  With a projected completion date still more than a year away, many large-scale changes can no longer be hidden as the library prepares to begin a new chapter in its life.  "We're aiming to be all set for fall term 2009," said Wes Boomgaarden, Ohio State University Libraries communication officer. The project is on-budget and on-schedule.

 

The library is currently in the pre-planning phase for the move back into the building, Boomgaarden said, with construction finishing up in May 2009.  After construction, fire and safety systems will be tested and books will return following the 2009 Summer Commencement, Boomgaarden added.

 

The project will cost more than $108 million, making it the largest allocation of capital for improvement of an academic building on campus to date, design and construction, faculty member Scott Conlon said in an e-mail.  But students do not need to worry about picking up the tab, since "none of the cost of the project is coming from student fees," said library communication coordinator Larry Allen.  All the money for improvements comes from state allocations (nearly $78 million) and private contributions ($30 million).

 

 

Found the construction website for the Library Renovation at http://library.osu.edu/sites/renovation/. 

 

eastview.jpg

 

swview.jpg

 

EWsection.jpg

 

WestRR.jpg

 

  • 4 weeks later...

Taken yesterday

101_0333.jpg

  • 3 months later...

OSU renovation reaches final chapter

Gift lifts library to funding goal

$4 million donation from Athletics Department fills only remaining gap of $108.7 million project

Saturday, August 16, 2008 

By Amanda Dolasinski THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

 

Thanks to another multimillion dollar gift from the Athletics Department, the $108.7 million renovation of Ohio State University's main library is now fully funded.  Officials announced the $4 million gift yesterday.  Together with a previous $5 million donation, the Athletics Department contributed nearly a third of the $30 million that fundraisers sought to upgrade the William Oxley Thompson Memorial Library.

 

More than 2,000 individuals also contributed. The rest of the money came from the state, $70 million, and the university, $8 million. The library is on budget and will be completed next August, said Joseph Branin, OSU's director of libraries.

 

3533581615_5e1999509e_o.jpg

Caption: The William Oxley Thompson Memorial Library has been closed since 2006 and is expected to reopen next August.

 

Click this link to see a slide show of the library: http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/multimedia/audio_slideshows/2008/08/library/index.html

 

Read more at http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/local_news/stories/2008/08/16/OSUlibrary.ART_ART_08-16-08_B1_T0B1RT1.html?sid=101

 

all those changes look impressive; but a cafe?! When I worked there as in the 70's we were lucky to have a Coke machine in the basement. At least I don't think the person in charge of student personnel back then (historical note: before it was called "human resources")--Trudy Harless (aka Trudy Heartless)--can still be there! Can she??

all those changes look impressive; but a cafe?! When I worked there as in the 70's we were lucky to have a Coke machine in the basement.

 

Surely you're not saying that today's college students are soft?  :wink:

I'm so glad they decided to renovate this rather than tear it down and build a new library.  Now the student union on the other hand needed to be built anew.

  • 8 months later...

An update from the construction website for the OSU Main Library Renovation at http://library.osu.edu/sites/renovation/. 

 

Renovation Wraps Up May 1

The three-year renovation of the William Oxley Thompson Memorial Library, started in the fall of 2006, is nearly complete.  The building will be turned back over to the OSU Libraries on May 1, 2009, and the move back into the Library will begin immediately.

 

The move, which includes more than 1.25 million volumes, along with furnishings, equipment and library staff, will take about three months.  Plans call for the Thompson Library to open for business in early August.  A series of special events are being planned now, culminating in a ribbon cutting ceremony of September 24 at 4 p.m. in conjunction with Welcome Week.

 

http://library.osu.edu/blogs/renovation/2009/04/17/renovation-wraps-up-may-1/

absolutely amazing.  it really seemed to go so fast.  I guess when I am no longer looking at it everyday it seems so.  I remember thinking that by the year 2010, OSU's campus will be 'complete' and thinking that was so far away.  With this done and the Union oh so close, and with 2010 being next year, time really seemed to fly by. 

  • 4 weeks later...

absolutely amazing. it really seemed to go so fast. I guess when I am no longer looking at it everyday it seems so. I remember thinking that by the year 2010, OSU's campus will be 'complete' and thinking that was so far away. With this done and the Union oh so close, and with 2010 being next year, time really seemed to fly by.

 

Tell me about it... when I was a student 6 years ago we still had Larkins Hall...

It seemed as though all of the construction on the campus really picked up during my junior year, which was 02/03.  I too viewed the completion date of everything being really far down the line that it seemed as though it would never be finished.  I was in Columbus 2 weeks ago, but didn't actually make it onto the OSU campus to check out the library in person (though I was on High Street and did see the new Union).

  • 1 month later...

OSU's main library reopens today after three-year, $109 million renovation

Monday,  August 3, 2009 - 3:07 AM

By Encarnacion Pyle, THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

 

Ohio State University's main library has undergone more nips, tucks and enhancements than an aging beauty queen trying to hang on to her youth.  But as sometimes happens, some work done in the past to serve a growing student body compromised the magnificence of the original building.

 

Anyone who walks through the doors of William Oxley Thompson Memorial Library now will be struck by its new mix of classic and contemporary features.  The library reopens to guests today after a three-year, $108.7 million renovation.  The project restores the grandeur of the historic library, which opened in 1913, and adds technological and other upgrades to meet the 21st century needs of students and scholars.

 

Read more at http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/local_news/stories/2009/08/03/OSU_library.ART_ART_08-03-09_A1_5NEL3IU.html

Pc0010300.jpg

The renovation of Ohio State University’s William Oxley Thompson Memorial Library included creating two atria with views of part of the 1.25-million-volume collection through glass walls. Wesley L. Boomgaarden, the library system’s preservation officer, explains the project.

 

 

 

Pc0040200.jpg

The 2 1 /2-story Grand Reference Hall has been re-created after being split into two singlestory rooms in 1966.

 

 

 

Pc0010400.jpg

The east atrium features this four-story “flying” staircase that has 100 steps and is not attached to a wall.  The atrium and its west twin also feature two major exhibit spaces.

 

 

LINK: OSU MAIN LIBRARY SLIDESHOW

WOW!

Well, I can safely say it definately beats what it USED to look like.

 

As long as my 11th floor view of the city is still there, it's all good.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

yea it looks fantastic.  i will have to check it out when I am in cbus at the end of this month. 

You used to just look at the city from 11th floor?

I had more fun than you.

If you used the dirty-ass 11th floor for anything else other than photos, I actually feel sorry for you, sir.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

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