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Can you pick Sal out in this photo? Can you?

 

From left to right, we have Soji...Cayce...Lludmila...and Sal. Yes, Sal. It was an interesting day.

The Sun And The Star will not be getting a rating because my feelings on it are too complicated ~ One Of Us Is Next was amazing and Knox was my favorite character. 10/10 ~ You’ll Be The Death Of Me was boring, especially when it became about dr*gs. 3/10 ~ Tell Me What Really Happened was great. It was told in a unique way but the end was a little sad. 8/10 ~ How To Survive Your Murder was good and the twist at the very end was awesome but it was really sad. 7/10

Buchstütze Buchständer Lesestütze © Bookstand Bookholder Bookrest © All rights reserved. Image fully copyrighted. All my images strictly only available with written royalty agreement. If interested, please ask. © Alle Rechte vorbehalten. Alle meine Bilder generell nur mit schriftl. Honorarvereinbg. Bitte ggf. fragen. ©

Elm1.6m. high (on stand) 1979

book stack -- art books?

Copyright Serena M. Agusto-Cox

Mobile displays that are integrated all along the "Main Street" of the library are used for face-out display of fiction titles. Bookstacks beyond feature display shelves that create a "collection interface zone" with low shelves and display opportunities to showcase the collections particular to each range of bookstacks.

The Reading Room

 

The Reading Room stands at the heart of the Museum, in the center of the Great Court. Completed in 1857, it was hailed as one of the great sights of London and became a world-famous center of learning.

 

The Reading Room is currently closed.

 

Design

 

By the early 1850s, the British Museum Library needed a larger reading room.

 

Antonio Panizzi, the Keeper of Printed Books (1837–1856), had the idea of constructing a round room in the empty central courtyard of the Museum building.

 

Construction

 

With a design by Sydney Smirke (1798-1877), work on the Reading Room began in 1854. Three years later it was completed. Using cast iron, concrete, glass and the latest heating and ventilation systems, it was a masterpiece of mid-19th century technology.

 

The room had a diameter of 42.6m (140ft) and was inspired by the domed Pantheon in Rome. However, it isn’t a free-standing dome in the technical sense.

 

It has been constructed in segments on a cast-iron framework. The ceiling is suspended on cast iron struts hanging down from the frame and is made out of papier-mâché.

 

Many bookstacks were built surrounding the new Reading Room. They were made of iron to take the weight of the books and protect them against fire.

 

In all, they contained three miles (4.8km) of bookcases and 25 miles (40km) of shelves.

 

Early Years

 

The Reading Room opened on May 2, 1857. Between 8-16 May, the Library was opened up for a special one-off public viewing. More than 62,000 visitors came to marvel at the new building.

 

Those wanting to use it had to apply in writing and were issued a reader’s ticket by the Principal Librarian.

 

Among those granted tickets were: Karl Marx, Lenin (who signed in under the name Jacob Richter) and novelists such as Bram Stoker and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

 

Restoration and Exhibition Space

 

In 1997 the books were moved to a new purpose-built building in St. Pancras and the bookstacks were taken down.

 

As part of the Great Court development the interior of the Reading Room was carefully restored. This process saw the papier mâché interior of the dome repaired and the original blue, cream and gold color scheme reinstated.

 

When it reopened in 2000, the Reading Room was made available to all Museum visitors for the first time.

 

It housed a modern information center, the Walter and Leonore Annenberg Center, and a collection of 25,000 books, catalogs and other printed material, which focused on the world cultures represented in the Museum.

 

The Reading Room was used for special exhibitions from 2007 until 2013.

probably looking up vlad the impaler, because it was "that time of year again"

Copyright Serena M. Agusto-Cox

The Great Court at the British Museum, officially named the Queen Elizabeth II Great Court, is a two-acre covered square at the center of the British Museum. Opened in December 2000 and designed by Foster and Partners, the space transformed the museumâs inner courtyardâformerly occupied by the British Library bookstacksâinto the largest covered public square in Europe. Its signature feature is the sweeping glass and steel roof, engineered by Buro Happold and built by Waagner-Biro, composed of 3,312 uniquely shaped panes. The 19th-century domed Reading Room sits at its heart, encircled by circulation routes, galleries, and visitor facilities.

 

The British Museum Reading Room, located at the heart of the Great Court, was designed by Sydney Smirke and opened in 1857 to house the growing library of the British Museum. Constructed of cast iron, concrete, and a papier-mâché dome inspired by the Pantheon, the roomâs circular design accommodated thousands of books and readers, with surrounding iron bookstacks and forty kilometers of shelving. It served as the principal reading room of the British Library until the collection relocated to St Pancras in 1997. After restoration, the Reading Room reopened in 2000 for general visitors, later hosting major exhibitions from 2007 to 2013 before closing for archival use until reopening in 2023.

 

The British Museum, located in Bloomsbury, London, was established in 1753 and opened in 1759 as the worldâs first national public museum. Originally housed in Montagu House, it now occupies a grand neoclassical building designed by Sir Robert Smirke, constructed between 1823 and 1852 on the same site. The museumâs encyclopedic collection of over eight million objects spans over two million years of human history, with major highlights including the Rosetta Stone, the Elgin Marbles from the Parthenon, and the Sutton Hoo treasures--many of which remain the subject of ongoing repatriation discussions.

the things we did to pass time when voyager went down... as you can see behind amanda's hands, we had already put all the blue things in order...

Tourguide explains how they brought book requests up and down from the bookstacks with the old elevators

  

4 Likes on Instagram

 

2 Comments on Instagram:

 

brehm_and_sons: Pretty aqua contents!

 

ensoularts: Same bookstack! & I color sort too. :)

  

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