Mansueto Library, The University of Chicago
The
Joe + Rika Mansueto Library (Helmut Jahn, Murphy / Jahn, 2011) at the
University of Chicago is very much the opposite of its older neighbor, the Joseph
Regenstein Library (Skidmore Owings and Merill / Walter Netsch, 1970). The Regenstein is a forbidding citadel
enclosed by an array of large squarish chunks of astonishingly lifeless, gray limestone
and hung in place so regularly and without reference to context as to deny the
comforting and natural distinctions between up and down, top and bottom, right
and left, north and south, east and west. It succeeds, by means of its solidity, in distinguishing
inside and out. There are tinted
glass bays in the center bay of the structure, but other than that, glass and
daylight are relegated to the narrow interstices between chunks. It is an essay in not knowing that the
exterior of a building can serve its interior and the people inside. As point of reference, Louis I. Kahn’s
Philips Exeter Library opened in 1971 and serves as an interesting comparison
as the buildings are contemporaneous and that, at Philips Exeter, the
challenges of daylighting, up and down, inside and out, are addressed in an
integrated and coherent way.
The
Mansueto, whose appearance is quite different from the Regenstein is similarly single-minded
in its approach to daylight: it admits nearly all of the available light and reveals
its interior completely. Ultimately,
one asks the question as to whether it serves its inhabitants much better. An egg-shaped network of steel holds
panels of fritted glass in place.
This envelope admits virtually all of the light that falls on it and
into the staff and study areas directly below it. It is much too bright, at least on sunny, summer afternoons
and it may be the same under skies of thin overcast. In full sun, the interior sizzles, visually bordering on
glare at the front desk and study tables. Several staff tables on the northwest
side are protected by umbrellas and while these protected work stations are
apparently for preservation work, if that work were moved elsewhere (as maybe
it should be) I’d keep the umbrellas in place. More would be helpful.
I visited on a warm, July afternoon and although cool, conditioned air
was fervently pumped inside, I could still feel the heat battling back against
the a.c. Needless to say, the books
are stored below this level, a projected 3.5 million of them in a deep
multi-level, automated retail storage and retrieval system not intended for
lengthy inhabitation. This
below-grade area requires little or no light. It seems that you have a choice of either too much light or
none. So much for browsing.
It
would be worth visiting the library under different sky conditions. My guess is
that under light overcast skies, it would still be a substantially bright
space; overcast skies can be very bright, brighter than a clear blue sky across
the entire sky dome, and this can be a visual problem. On sunny winter days, the glare might
be worsened as it may be easier for low angle sunlight to enter into a visitor’s
cone of vision and to skim the reflective surfaces of reading tables and materials. A reading space begs for surfaces that
reflect and diffuse light into a space and for lighting variety so that readers
can find different locations that suit them, individually, and give the eyes a
rest from a uniformly lighted field. It might also be interesting to see this space at night; the
library probably looks great from the outside with its electric light blazing. The Mansueto is an elegant modern
structure, a nice object on this corner site, but a pat answer to the idea of a
library as place to care for books and to read. Here, the books are hidden and its readers entirely exposed
to sun and skylight. I suppose
that students can retreat to the old Regenstein and total electricity.
To read the other side of the argument:
Mansueto's
lighting design wins a GE Edison Award of Merit.
American
Institute of Architects' Chicago Chapter Awards the Mansueto Library a Distinguished Building Citation of Merit.
Photo of the Joseph Regenstein Library by Americanist;
http://www.free-photos.biz/photographs/architecture/libraries/159534_joseph_regenstein_library__university_of_chicago.php
All other photos by Martin Schwartz
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