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On December 11, 1972 the
new addition to the Boston Public Library was opened. The building was designed by
noted architect Philip Johnson, with collaboration from the Architects Design Group of
Boston, who observed two requests -- to observe the existing roof line of the McKim
Building, and to use material (Milford Granite) that would harmonize with the exterior of
the existing Central Library Building. The McKim and Johnson Buildings are linked on three levels
for easy access to all the resources of the library. The Deferrari Hall, the main
stairways and lobby have granite flooring and walls, to match the exterior of the
building.
The Johnson Building occupies ten
levels, four levels of public services, one of behind-the-scenes library processing and
administration, four levels of book stacks for the research collection, and one level
shared by utilities, maintenance and stacks.
In order to contain nine floors, and the
mezzanine level, within the height limitation respecting the existing building, unique
structural and mechanical systems were developed. The upper five floors are
suspended from huge roof trusses which form the mechanical penthouse. This allowed
for the maximum amount of usable space and eliminated the need for a forest of columns on
the second floor.
The Johnson Building contains
approximately 1,900 tons of reinforcing steel rods and 2,100 tons of structural
steel. Enough steel was used to form a 5 inch diameter pipe reaching from the earth
to a 100-mile-high orbiting space craft. The 25,000 cubic yards of concrete used for
the building would form a sidewalk back from the space craft to earth.
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