Snøhetta recently completed
the James B. Hunt Jr. Library on North Carolina
State University's
Raleigh campus.
The Hunt library serves as a centerpiece for NC State University’s Centennial
Campus, which the school has used for expansions since the 1970s to avoid
disturbing the quads of its traditional neo-Georgian brick old campus.
The James B. Hunt Jr.
Library builds on all we have learned to create an iconic building that
captures the spirit of NC State University’s strengths in science, engineering,
technology, and textiles.
Directed by a supercomputer
in the bowels of the building, the bookBot barcodes the volumes, sorts them by
size, and stores them in more than 18,000 bins. The first floor of the building
features Robot Alley, where visitors can watch the bookBot through a glass wall
as it speeds through huge storage aisles to retrieve books, journals, and other
materials.
With all that space freed
up by the bookBot—around 30,000 volumes still live in plain view—Snøhetta set
about filling the place with screens, from touchscreen kiosks and browsable
visualizations of books by subject matter to the full-on virtual environments
students can create in the Teaching and Visualization Lab.
The program also includes
nearly 100 study rooms, two learning commons, auditoriums, and the Makerspace,
which is outfitted with 3D printers, a 3D scanner, and a laser cutter.
The university points out
that high-density automated shelving systems like the bot—which is really four
robots—has long had widespread use in industries like auto manufacturing and
textile production, but now could have far-reaching implications for how we set
up the research libraries of the future.
The long rectangular volume
provides 221,000
square feet of space for up to 1,700 students in
traditional and informal study rooms, technology labs, and lounges.
An envelope of fritted
glass crossed by a zig-zag of aluminum sun shades lets in daylight and permits
views to a nearby lake. An automated book delivery system (see slide 4) reduces
the space needed for stacks and can accommodate a 2 million volume collection.
In addition to library
functions, the facility also includes academic offices, an auditorium, and a
political think tank. NC State University has committed to lead by example in
advancing sustainability as a moral imperative and as an economic advantage;
The Hunt Library is a model of that leadership.
Shaded by its beautiful
solar fins, warming its water with rooftop solar panels, cooled and heated by
innovative chilled beam and radiant panel systems, filtering storm runoff with
beautiful green roofs and the Rain Garden, and flooded with natural light, the
building has been designed for a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
(LEED) Silver environmental rating.
Location: Raleight, North Carolina,
USA
Architect: Snøhetta
Area: 20,439 m2
Year: 2012
Client: NC State University














Modern architecture is antisocial and dead.
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