In honor of National Library Week, we’re visiting Seattle Public Library’s Central Library. With its innovative glass and steel design, you could say we’ve come a long way from the world’s first libraries that housed archives of clay tablets and papyrus scrolls. Downtown Seattle’s 11-story flagship public library has lots of open spaces like this one that allow patrons to meet, study, search the web, or read in comfortable, light-filled rooms. It can house more than 1.5 million books, many of which are stored in an innovative "Books Spiral," which displays the volumes in a continuous helix of bookshelves over 3.5 stories without breaking the Dewey Decimal System onto different floors or sections. The library, designed by architect Rem Koolhaas, moves all those books around by using a sorting system that resembles an airport’s luggage conveyor belt. How’s that for high-tech?
Ready, set, read
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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50 years of Earth Day
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Bridge of Hillsborough County
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An oceanic valentine
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Everglades National Park marks 90 years
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Splügen Pass, Switzerland
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World Children s Day
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Dunquin Pier, County Kerry, Ireland
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Horse Head Rock, New South Wales, Australia
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Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival, China
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Yellow-eyed penguins, Moeraki, New Zealand
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Illuminated Uluru
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Skyscraper Day
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Notre-Dame Cathedral reopens
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Happy holidays!
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Mute swan
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Tegallalang terrace farms in Ubud, Bali, Indonesia
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Tracking ships on the Day of the Seafarer
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Bukhansan National Park, South Korea
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Bellissima!
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Andermatt village in the Alps, Switzerland
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Busy building wetlands
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Humpbacks return to the Inside Passage
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Sleep tight, little hedgehog
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Struck by Southwestern beauty
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Visiting the Mamanuca Islands for Fiji Day
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Happy New Year! (Again!)
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The view will stop you in your tracks
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There once was a lighthouse from...
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Forward-thinking women of history
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Goats don t grow on trees
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

