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Uncategorized Saturday, May 14th 2011 at 11:07 am

University of Chicago Shows Off its Automated Library

The University of Chicago will be opening its new Joe and Rika Mansueto Library later this week. Upon entering the glass and steel dome, some patrons may be surprised by what they find. From Big Think:

Inside this dome, visitors will find no book shelves and no stacks. Only reading tables in a reading room. It is what is beneath this room that makes the library interesting. Below this reading room is a vault where the books are bar-coded and stored in bins. Because the items are not meant to be browsed, they are not sorted by subject. They are sorted by size in order to maximize the efficient use of each bin. The volumes are searched for online and retrieved by cranes, then delivered to the researcher.

Of course, this will separate patrons of the library from the books, and drastically change the way they browse. Instead of being able to see what books are around a volume or a subject patrons are interested in, they’ll be using a computer search system.

We’ve covered the plans for other libraries that would employ automatic retrieval systems and do away with book stacks, but this system is fully functional. What’s more, it will serve major university, giving the whole scheme something of a seal of approval. Perhaps getting lost in the labyrinthine stacks will soon be a thing of the past.

Read on after the break to see video of the book retrieval system in action.

(UofC Libraries, Big Think via TYWKIWDBI

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  • Fishy

    So the assistant has to search through all 100 books in the bin for the right one each time someone requests a book? They could at least put the spines facing upwards, that’s gonna take aaaaaages.

  • Anonymous

     tinyurl.com/297sxrk

  • Kentried

     If the computer system is hacked or goes down for any reason, no-one will know where any book is located.  Power failure would mean an inventory item by item, which could take months or years

  • Glhansen

    Is there even a single person in the library world that thinks browsing is not an important search strategy? And at a university? The professors and grad students are going to keep the pages very busy, I think.

  • Patientetherizd

    Over time, the page block will begin to separate from the cover if the spine faces up.  The books are placed spine down for preservation reasons.