Hale Library

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Hale Library
KSU Hale library.jpg
Former names Farrell Library
General information
Type Academic Library
Architectural style Romanesque Revival
Address Kansas State University
Town or city Manhattan, Kansas
Country United States
Completed 1927 (Campus Library)
1955 (Farrell Library)
1970 (Southeast)
1997 (Hale Library)
Technical details
Floor count 5 and basement
Website
www.lib.k-state.edu

Hale Library is the main library building on Kansas State University's Manhattan, Kansas campus.

History

The "Great Room", one of the oldest parts of the library. On the left side of the picture, the murals by David Hicks Overmyer are visible.

On October 5, 1997, Hale Library was officially dedicated ending an 80-year architectural odyssey and ushering in a new world of library resources, both traditional and electronic. The college library was completed in 1927, making it the first building on the Kansas State Agricultural College's campus devoted solely to housing the library. The historic library has a room of major interest, called the "Great Room" which features murals by David Hicks Overmyer completed in 1934 and highlighting the Agricultural College's strengths of "1) science and industry, 2) agricultural and animal husbandry 3) the arts [and] 4) the home."[1] The preliminary studies for the mural are currently held by the Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art on the Kansas State University Manhattan Campus.[2]

Lack of space continued to be problematic and in 1955 a stacks addition was completed to the south. At that time the library was named in honor of Francis David Farrell, the university’s eighth president (1925–1943). To alleviate overcrowding, a second addition to the southeast was completed in 1970.

Exterior of Hale Library
1955 stacks addition

Growth of collections and services, combined with a severe reduction in quality study space, led to outside consultants recommending that the library be expanded at a cost of $28 million. With dwindling state resources for construction projects, an innovative answer to how finance a new library had to be found. Three components came together to fund the project: a federal wind fall of funds to the state allowed Governor Joan Finney to allocate $18 million for the construction; K-State students passed a referendum to provide $5 million; and Joe and Joyce Hale, impressed with the students’ financial commitment, came forward with $5 million. Without all three, the library addition and renovation could not have become a reality. To recognize the essential contribution of the Hale’s the new library was named in their honor. To acknowledge the importance of the original library and its namesake, the 1927 structure retains the designation of “Historic Farrell Library” and the main entry to Hale is officially known as the Farrell Entrance.

Other major donors provided initial and more recent funding during the last decade, including the Kansas Farm Bureau Insurance Co., Andreas Foundation, Archer Daniels Midland Foundation, Dow Chemical, William R. Love, Richard and Marjorie Morse, and Mr. and Mrs. Dan Wassenberg. The Friends of the Libraries, founded in 1984, has provided funding for numerous acquisitions, furniture, and equipment during the last ten years. Students continued to support its library through funding initiatives that include computer stations for the InfoCommons, SFX software, and the Google Search Appliance.

One of the major goals of the new library was to assimilate the old and the new structures, architecturally and aesthetically. The design team of Brent Bowman & Associates (now BBN Architects Inc) of Manhattan, Kansas in association with Hammond Beeby Babka (now HBRA) of Chicago, Illinois were commissioned to design a comprehensive expansion and renovation project that would double the size of the existing campus library while integrating additions dating from 1951 and 1970.[3] With that in mind, the construction encased and expanded the west, south, and east sides of the previous library, while leaving the original 1927 building exposed to preserve its historic beauty and significance. In 1999 Hale Library received the Merit Award for Excellence from the American Institute of Architects for the central states region.

On the interior, the library was designed to be user friendly and house the collections, services, and departments necessary to anticipate and provide the needs of the 21st century. In addition to providing traditional library material, library resources are available to distant users through databases with full text delivery, innovative searching capabilities (most recently the Google Search Appliance), digital initiatives, and interlibrary services. To meet the challenging role of providing information to users, the Collection Services and Access Services Departments have met and advanced the demands presented by the information explosion. To support the technology needs of students and faculty, the Information Technology Assistance Center (iTAC) is housed in Hale. The space odyssey of a library never ends and the K-State Libraries has entered a cooperative agreement with the University of Kansas to house bound volumes in a shared storage facility in Lawrence, Kansas.

Hale Library, the largest building on the K-State campus, includes five floors and a basement.

Notes

  1. "Center Library Mural Will be Painted First," Kansas industrialist (21 March 1934) cited in North,70.
  2. North, 70.
  3. http://www.bbnarchitects.com/project/hale-library-addition-kansas-state-university/

Works cited

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