Commons knowledge: A library for rare books yet to be written

This thesis is a typological investigation of the library, specifically examining how the digitization of information informs design. The agency of the book, which has historically been the protagonist of library design, has been radically transformed by the migration to the electronic, which cause...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Hight, Christopher
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1911/62058
id ndltd-RICE-oai-scholarship.rice.edu-1911-62058
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-RICE-oai-scholarship.rice.edu-1911-620582013-05-01T03:46:37ZCommons knowledge: A library for rare books yet to be writtenLibrary ScienceInformation ScienceArchitectureThis thesis is a typological investigation of the library, specifically examining how the digitization of information informs design. The agency of the book, which has historically been the protagonist of library design, has been radically transformed by the migration to the electronic, which cause specific spatial ramifications. This library is imagined as a place that enhances access to materials available online, while also providing opportunities for access to materials that cannot be digitized. It acknowledges that current patrons are using libraries to rapidly reconstitute information and, although the majority of the materials they produce will ultimately exist in the realm of the electronic, the building itself celebrates in its own physicality those rare objects, whether existing or yet to be created, that stand against the tide of the virtual.Hight, ChristopherFranch Gilabert, Eva2011-07-25T02:05:48Z2011-07-25T02:05:48Z2010ThesisTextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1911/62058eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Library Science
Information Science
Architecture
spellingShingle Library Science
Information Science
Architecture
Commons knowledge: A library for rare books yet to be written
description This thesis is a typological investigation of the library, specifically examining how the digitization of information informs design. The agency of the book, which has historically been the protagonist of library design, has been radically transformed by the migration to the electronic, which cause specific spatial ramifications. This library is imagined as a place that enhances access to materials available online, while also providing opportunities for access to materials that cannot be digitized. It acknowledges that current patrons are using libraries to rapidly reconstitute information and, although the majority of the materials they produce will ultimately exist in the realm of the electronic, the building itself celebrates in its own physicality those rare objects, whether existing or yet to be created, that stand against the tide of the virtual.
author2 Hight, Christopher
author_facet Hight, Christopher
title Commons knowledge: A library for rare books yet to be written
title_short Commons knowledge: A library for rare books yet to be written
title_full Commons knowledge: A library for rare books yet to be written
title_fullStr Commons knowledge: A library for rare books yet to be written
title_full_unstemmed Commons knowledge: A library for rare books yet to be written
title_sort commons knowledge: a library for rare books yet to be written
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1911/62058
_version_ 1716584859032354816