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Information About

Los Angeles Central Library




Membership is open to everyone, not just residents of the City of Los Angeles, as there are no residency requirements to obtain a library card. Circulating books, periodicals, computer access and audio visual materials are available to patrons. The Library 's Rare Book Department is located in its downtown Los Angeles location. The LAPL also provides services to home bound patrons.

Aggressive expansion and growth of the system began in the 1920s . Under library Board Chairman Orra E. Monnette , the system gained the support of Los Angeles citizens and began building a network of modern branch libraries to keep pace with Los Angeles' growth as a city.


CENTRAL LIBRARY


The Richard Riordan Central Library, originally constructed in 1926 , is a Downtown Los Angeles landmark. It is the third largest library in the United States in terms of book and periodical holdings. Originally simply the Central Library, it was renamed in 2001 after L.A. Mayor Richard Riordan .

Architect Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue designed the original Los Angeles Central Library to mimic the Architecture of Ancient Egypt . The central tower is topped with a tiled mosaic Pyramid with Sun s on either side with a hand holding a torch representing the "Light of Learning" at the apex. Other elements include Sphinx es, Snake s, and celestial mosaics. It has similarities to the Nebraska State Capitol in Lincoln, Nebraska , also designed by Goodhue.

It was extensively renovated and expanded in the Neo-Mission Style in the late 1980s , including an enormous, six-story atrium dedicated to former mayor Tom Bradley . The interior of the library is decorated with various figures, statues, chandeliers, and grilles, notably a four-part Mural by illustrator Dean Cornwell depicting stages of the History Of California .

The catalyst for the renovation was the devastating Arson Fire of April 29 , 1986 . Although the building was safely evacuated, its vintage construction precluded the ventilation of heat and smoke, and limited Firefighter access. Some 400,000 volumes—20 percent of the library's holdings—were destroyed, with significant water and smoke damage done to the surviving works. A second fire on September 3 of the same year destroyed the contents of the Music Department Reading Room.

As part of the rehabilitation plan, the LAPL sold its Air Rights to developers, enabling the construction of the eponymous Library Tower (later renamed the U.S. Bank Tower ) Skyscraper across the street.


BRANCHES

Besides the Central Library in downtown Los Angeles, the system also operates 71 branch locations in the city's many Neighborhoods :



  • Angeles Mesa

  • Arroyo Seco Regional

  • Ascot

  • Atwater Village

  • Baldwin Hills

  • Benjamin Franklin

  • Donald Bruce Kaufman – Brentwood

  • Cahuenga

  • Canoga Park

  • Chatsworth

  • Chinatown

  • Cypress Park

  • Will and Ariel Durant

  • Eagle Rock

  • Echo Park

  • Edendale

  • El Sereno

  • Encino – Tarzana

  • Exposition Park – Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune Regional

  • Fairfax

  • Felipe de Neve

  • Granada Hills

  • Harbor Gateway – Harbor City


  • Frances Howard Goldwyn – Hollywood Regional

  • Hyde Park

  • Jefferson

  • John C. Fremont

  • John Muir

  • Junipero Serra

  • Lake View Terrace

  • Lincoln Heights

  • Little Tokyo

  • Los Feliz

  • Malabar

  • Mar Vista

  • Mark Twain

  • Memorial

  • Mid-Valley Regional

  • North Hollywood Regional

  • Northridge

  • Pacoima

  • Palisades

  • Palms – Rancho Park

  • Panorama City

  • Pico Union

  • Pio Pico – Koreatown

  • Platt


  • Playa Vista

  • Porter Ranch

  • Robert Louis Stevenson

  • Robertson

  • San Pedro Regional

  • Sherman Oaks

  • Studio City

  • Sun Valley

  • Sunland – Tujunga

  • Sylmar

  • Valley Plaza

  • Van Nuys

  • Venice – Abbot Kinney Memorial

  • Vermont Square

  • Vernon – Leon H. Washington Jr. Memorial

  • Washington Irving

  • Alma Reaves Woods – Watts

  • West Los Angeles Regional

  • West Valley Regional

  • Westchester – Loyola Village

  • Westwood

  • Wilmington

  • Wilshire

  • Woodland Hills



The Cahuenga Branch, Lincoln Heights Branch and the Vermont Square Branch are the three remaining Carnegie Libraries in the Los Angeles Public Library System. Six were originally built, but three were demolished.


EXTERNAL LINKS