Denver Central Library

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationGolden Triangle, Denver, Colorado, United States
TypePublic library
Denver Central Library
39°44′17″N 104°59′18″W / 39.73806°N 104.98833°W / 39.73806; -104.98833
LocationGolden Triangle, Denver, Colorado, United States
TypePublic library
ArchitectMichael Graves
Branch ofDenver Public Library
Collection
Items collectedBooks, periodicals, digital media, historical photographs
Size2 million items
Other information
Budget$91.6 million (Construction cost)
Parent organizationCity and County of Denver
Public transit access16th Street Mall Shuttle
Websitewww.denverlibrary.org

The Denver Central Library is the flagship building of the Denver Public Library System. It is located within Downtown Denver's Golden Triangle neighborhood and sits on the south side of Colorado's 16th Street Mall, adjacent to the Denver Art Museum. The postmodern building was designed by architect Michael Graves. Commissioned in 1990 and completed in 1995, it is one of the largest libraries in the United States and receives more than one million visitors each year.[1] It was the venue of the 23rd G8 Summit in 1997.

G8 Summit

Architecture

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI