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[[Image:Stanford_meyer_library.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Meyer Library - [[Stanford University]]]]
[[Image:Stanford_meyer_library.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Meyer Library - [[Stanford University]]]]
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The J. Henry Meyer Memorial Library, dedicated on December 2, 1966, is one of several libraries in Stanford University. Designed by architect and Stanford alumnus John Carl Warnecke, Meyer Library's arcades feature high columns and vaulted ceilings. The library is a four-story building with a sloping tile roof, and the outer sides of the building is lined with vertial bands of tall windows. The inner, central section of each side of the building is textured with a mesh of small windows.
The J. Henry Meyer Memorial Library, dedicated on December 2, 1966, is one of several libraries in Stanford University. Designed by architect and Stanford alumnus John Carl Warnecke, Meyer Library's arcades feature high columns and vaulted ceilings. The library is a four-story building with a sloping tile roof, and the outer sides of the building is lined with vertial bands of tall windows. The inner, central section of each side of the building is textured with a mesh of small windows.



Revision as of 20:52, 6 June 2007

Meyer Library - Stanford University

The J. Henry Meyer Memorial Library, dedicated on December 2, 1966, is one of several libraries in Stanford University. Designed by architect and Stanford alumnus John Carl Warnecke, Meyer Library's arcades feature high columns and vaulted ceilings. The library is a four-story building with a sloping tile roof, and the outer sides of the building is lined with vertial bands of tall windows. The inner, central section of each side of the building is textured with a mesh of small windows.

The first floor of Meyer Library consists of several seminal rooms, a computer cluster, as well as a 24-hour study room. The second floor is the home of Academic Computing and Residential Computing, which provides technological expertise and resources to faculty and students. In addition to a general computer cluster, there is a specialized Multimedia Studio and a Digital Language Lab. Also, the Meyer Technology Services Desk is present here to provide direct troubleshooting and consulting services. The third floor contains library systems and offices. The fourth floor houses the East Asia Library, which has a vash Chinese collection of over 300,000 volumes, a Japanese collection of over 100,000 volumes, and a new Korean collection of over 10,000 volumes.

Meyer Library, being open 24 hours, 7 days a week, is infamous as a location for students searching for a quiet place to study.