A Library in the Grands Moulins de Paris: challenging Reality

In 2006, the University of Paris 7 and its new Main Library will move to Paris Rive Gauche, a recently developed neighbourhood on the left bank of the Seine. The library will occupy most of the city’s former industrial mills, the Grands Moulins de Paris. As part of the project, the library developed...

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Main Author: Catherine Tresson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: openjournals.nl 2006-07-01
Series:Liber Quarterly: The Journal of European Research Libraries
Online Access:http://www.liberquarterly.eu/articles/10.18352/lq.7844/
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spelling doaj-38cb9397757740f59a47807e094e9f752021-10-02T18:54:56Zengopenjournals.nlLiber Quarterly: The Journal of European Research Libraries2213-056X2006-07-0116210.18352/lq.78447799A Library in the Grands Moulins de Paris: challenging RealityCatherine Tresson0N/aIn 2006, the University of Paris 7 and its new Main Library will move to Paris Rive Gauche, a recently developed neighbourhood on the left bank of the Seine. The library will occupy most of the city’s former industrial mills, the Grands Moulins de Paris. As part of the project, the library developed a very detailed functional program. The facilities are expected to comprise 1,800 workstations (half of which will be computerized), and upon completion will have a capacity of 300,000 freely accessible documents and 350,000 documents in store over a total surface area of some 12,000 m2. The architect Rudy Ricciotti won the international competition to design the library held in 2001. Perfectly suited to its function, the industrial building in which the library is housed dates from the 1920s. It presents both advantages (vast surfaces, sufficient load-bearing capacity, natural light, etc.) and obstacles (restrictions on free circulation, forests of columns in certain areas, interrupted spaces, etc.) to being transformed into a library that is functional and adapted to its purposes. The building’s structure and the constraints it imposed profoundly influenced the program which had to be adjusted, and also affected other aspects, including the arrangement and features of the furnishings as well as the building’s system of signs. In agreement with the university, the library worked in close collaboration with the architect from the earliest sketches onwards. As a result, his initial plan also evolved considerably. The installation of the library in the Grands Moulins offers us a chance to observe the nature and effects of the interactions between the transformation of a building and the evolution of a program.http://www.liberquarterly.eu/articles/10.18352/lq.7844/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catherine Tresson
spellingShingle Catherine Tresson
A Library in the Grands Moulins de Paris: challenging Reality
Liber Quarterly: The Journal of European Research Libraries
author_facet Catherine Tresson
author_sort Catherine Tresson
title A Library in the Grands Moulins de Paris: challenging Reality
title_short A Library in the Grands Moulins de Paris: challenging Reality
title_full A Library in the Grands Moulins de Paris: challenging Reality
title_fullStr A Library in the Grands Moulins de Paris: challenging Reality
title_full_unstemmed A Library in the Grands Moulins de Paris: challenging Reality
title_sort library in the grands moulins de paris: challenging reality
publisher openjournals.nl
series Liber Quarterly: The Journal of European Research Libraries
issn 2213-056X
publishDate 2006-07-01
description In 2006, the University of Paris 7 and its new Main Library will move to Paris Rive Gauche, a recently developed neighbourhood on the left bank of the Seine. The library will occupy most of the city’s former industrial mills, the Grands Moulins de Paris. As part of the project, the library developed a very detailed functional program. The facilities are expected to comprise 1,800 workstations (half of which will be computerized), and upon completion will have a capacity of 300,000 freely accessible documents and 350,000 documents in store over a total surface area of some 12,000 m2. The architect Rudy Ricciotti won the international competition to design the library held in 2001. Perfectly suited to its function, the industrial building in which the library is housed dates from the 1920s. It presents both advantages (vast surfaces, sufficient load-bearing capacity, natural light, etc.) and obstacles (restrictions on free circulation, forests of columns in certain areas, interrupted spaces, etc.) to being transformed into a library that is functional and adapted to its purposes. The building’s structure and the constraints it imposed profoundly influenced the program which had to be adjusted, and also affected other aspects, including the arrangement and features of the furnishings as well as the building’s system of signs. In agreement with the university, the library worked in close collaboration with the architect from the earliest sketches onwards. As a result, his initial plan also evolved considerably. The installation of the library in the Grands Moulins offers us a chance to observe the nature and effects of the interactions between the transformation of a building and the evolution of a program.
url http://www.liberquarterly.eu/articles/10.18352/lq.7844/
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