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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bostick, Sharon L., Irwin, Bryan
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ978388
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author Bostick, Sharon L.
Irwin, Bryan
author_facet Bostick, Sharon L.
Irwin, Bryan
Bostick, Sharon L.
Irwin, Bryan
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Designing an Academic Library as a Place and a Space: How a Robotic Storage System Will Create a 21st Century Library Design Bostick, Sharon L. Irwin, Bryan Academic Libraries Educational Facilities Design Educational Facilities Improvement Library Facilities Storage Library Materials Library Automation Robotics Renovating, expanding or building new libraries today is a challenge on several levels. Libraries in general are faced with image issues, such as the assumption that a library building exists only to house print material followed by the equally erroneous assumption that everything is now available online, thus rendering a physical building obsolete. Libraries are also faced with serious funding issues, and with the basic reality that space is at a premium. In academic libraries, the way students use libraries is changing as are their expectations of a library. Many academic library buildings are older and were designed to protect printed material and other physical items, such as artifacts or recordings. Spaces for people, while important, were by necessity secondary to this protection. This has led to many buildings functioning as more of a warehouse than a center for scholarly and academic activity. Services, reader spaces, and classrooms tended to be secondary and available only as stack space allowed. The consistent incorporation of new technologies is drastically altering this environment. New technologies include advances in building materials and design options that allow light to become a major feature in library design, creating a bright, open, welcoming space. This creates opportunities to develop flexible, innovative learning spaces. And new storage technologies are being used to create and expand vital learning spaces while keeping valuable texts and other items close by and easily retrievable. In this article, the author discusses how a robotic storage system at the University of Missouri-Kansas City (UMKC) creates a 21st century library design.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ978388
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2012
record_format eric
spellingShingle Designing an Academic Library as a Place and a Space: How a Robotic Storage System Will Create a 21st Century Library Design
Bostick, Sharon L.
Irwin, Bryan
Academic Libraries
Educational Facilities Design
Educational Facilities Improvement
Library Facilities
Storage
Library Materials
Library Automation
Robotics
Designing an Academic Library as a Place and a Space: How a Robotic Storage System Will Create a 21st Century Library Design Bostick, Sharon L. Irwin, Bryan Academic Libraries Educational Facilities Design Educational Facilities Improvement Library Facilities Storage Library Materials Library Automation Robotics Renovating, expanding or building new libraries today is a challenge on several levels. Libraries in general are faced with image issues, such as the assumption that a library building exists only to house print material followed by the equally erroneous assumption that everything is now available online, thus rendering a physical building obsolete. Libraries are also faced with serious funding issues, and with the basic reality that space is at a premium. In academic libraries, the way students use libraries is changing as are their expectations of a library. Many academic library buildings are older and were designed to protect printed material and other physical items, such as artifacts or recordings. Spaces for people, while important, were by necessity secondary to this protection. This has led to many buildings functioning as more of a warehouse than a center for scholarly and academic activity. Services, reader spaces, and classrooms tended to be secondary and available only as stack space allowed. The consistent incorporation of new technologies is drastically altering this environment. New technologies include advances in building materials and design options that allow light to become a major feature in library design, creating a bright, open, welcoming space. This creates opportunities to develop flexible, innovative learning spaces. And new storage technologies are being used to create and expand vital learning spaces while keeping valuable texts and other items close by and easily retrievable. In this article, the author discusses how a robotic storage system at the University of Missouri-Kansas City (UMKC) creates a 21st century library design.
title Designing an Academic Library as a Place and a Space: How a Robotic Storage System Will Create a 21st Century Library Design
topic Academic Libraries
Educational Facilities Design
Educational Facilities Improvement
Library Facilities
Storage
Library Materials
Library Automation
Robotics
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ978388