Malmö City Library

Coordinates: 55°36′02″N 12°59′39″E / 55.6005°N 12.9941°E / 55.6005; 12.9941
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Malmö City Library
Malmö stadsbibliotek
Map
55°36′02″N 12°59′39″E / 55.6005°N 12.9941°E / 55.6005; 12.9941
LocationMalmö, Skåne County, Sweden
TypePublic library
Established12 December 1905; 119 years ago (1905-12-12)
Architect(s)John Smedberg [sv], Fredrik Sundbärg [sv], Henning Larsen
Access and use
Circulation1.5 million
Population served1.5 million
References: [1]

Malmö City Library (Swedish: Malmö stadsbibliotek) is a municipal public library in Malmö, Sweden, which opened on 12 December 1905. It has 550,000 different media, about 10,000 DVDs and 33,500 music CDs. In 2006, it became the first library in Sweden to lend video games.[2]

History

Malmö City Library first opened on 12 December 1905, then in Hotel Tunneln. At that time they had 3,096 volumes – books and periodicals. In 1946, it moved to "The Castle" at Regementsgatan. The Castle, as it had come to be known as, was originally built for Malmö Museum, and was designed by the architects John Smedberg and Fredrik Sundbärg who had been inspired by Danish and Southern Swedish renaissance castles.

Malmö City Library, as it is today, consists of three buildings. "The Calendar of light" was designed by the Danish architect Henning Larsen and was inaugurated 31 May 1997. The Castle was restored and re-inaugurated 24 September 1999. These two main buildings are linked by a building called "The Cylinder", where the entrance, an information desk, a return desk and a cafe are located.

  • The old building
    The old building
  • "The Cylinder" linking the old and new buildings
    "The Cylinder" linking the old and new buildings
  • Interior
    Interior
  • Interior at night
    Interior at night
  • The Calendar of Light in winter
    The Calendar of Light in winter

References

  1. ^ "Om huset och dess historia" (in Swedish). Malmö Municipality. 19 May 2021. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
  2. ^ "Malmö först i landet med att låna ut tv-spel". Sydsvenskan (in Swedish). 22 December 2005. Retrieved 27 June 2023.