Phoenix Central Library, Phoenix, Arizona

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Phoenix Central Library
Designer Will Bruder
Location Phoenix, United States
Date 1992 to 1995
Building Type Library
Climate desert
Context urban
Builder Sundt Corp.
Street Address 1221 Central Avenue
Notes With Wendell Burnette. Also known as Burton Barr Central Library

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Building Details
Client City of Phoenix
Cost $28M
Area 280,000 sf.
Stories 5


The Phoenix Central Library has become a landmark on the Phoenix skyline and an icon of late 20th century modern architecture. It has quickly become a point of community pride while serving the region’s library and information needs. The library houses a 1,000,000 volume collection within its 280,000 square feet. The great reading room on the fifth floor, housing the nonfiction collection, is the largest reading room in North America.

Using a single, central open core, the ‘crystal canyon’ provides vertical circulation with three high-speed elevators and the grand staircase, a plan arrangement that renders all collections accessible and easy to find. The combination of innovative computer cabling, lighting, furniture design, and layout strategies with the library’s digital and real information has given the library a unique flexibility to meet changes in operation gracefully and economically. The library is often cited as an example of green architecture, addressing many issues of environmentally sustainable design. The thermal mass of the walls and a highly efficient mechanical system cut energy usage to one-third the amount initially projected by city planners and utility experts. The Phoenix Central Library was completed in 1995 at a cost of $28,000,000, $98.00 per square foot.



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