This guide looks at the development of public libraries in England after the Second World War. It places their architecture – external and also internal – within a period of considerable political, social and economic change.

Post-war aspirations set new challenges for the country’s library services, which had already begun to expand considerably in the 1930s. Outwardly, new library buildings continued – financial constraints permitting - to reflect civic pride and aspirations, while inside new layouts, fixtures and fittings provided for an increasingly middle-class readership. Children’s services were ever-more important, while larger libraries offered facilities such as local studies and record libraries, and later computers.
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It places their architecture – external and also internal – within a period of considerable political, social and economic change.

Post-war aspirations set new challenges for the country’s library services, which had already begun to expand considerably in the 1930s.
Read more
Introduction
Historical background
The background to post-war library building
The earliest post-war libraries, 1955-65
Later developments in library design, 1965-85
Change and the future
Further reading
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This guide looks at the development of public libraries in England after the Second World War

Product details

ISBN
9781848024557
Published
2016
Publisher
Historic England; Historic England
Height
297 mm
Width
210 mm
Age
012, P, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Author

Biographical note

Elain Harwood was a Senior Architectural Investigator with Historic England, specialising in the years after 1945. Elain sadly passed away in 2023.