Bibliothèque Nationale François Mitterand
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Location:
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12 quai Panhard-Levassor
Paris
13e
France
coordinates:
48.8278351 2.3829658
Building names(s): Bibliothèque Nationale François Mitterand / Bibliothèque Nationale de France
Architect/Designer:
Dominique Perrault
architect website: www.perraultarchitecte.com
Other Information:
Completion date: 1995
Function: library
getting there: Take the RER to the Library’s own station, Bibliothèque François Mitterand.Last modified: 26 April, 2011 | Suggested By LT



The newest of the Grands Projets (Mitterrand’s 15 billion franc program to provide a series of modern monuments to symbolize France’s central role in art, politics, and world economy at the end of the twentieth century) is also the largest. But, for its size, it is also remarkable for the attention paid to its smaller, human-scaled details. The architect has taken a reductively simple overall plan—four 25-story L-shaped towers of books (symbolizing open books) arranged at the corners of a giant platform around a sunken garden—and used repetition necessary in even a much smaller building to great effect.
The result is a deceptively ordinary building that is actually quite exceptional.
Walking toward the building along the Seine, one is first presented with an over- scaled stair, similar to the one at the base of the Grande Arche. The first step on this stair, leading to the top of a giant plinth on which the four towers sit, reveals the first of many pleasant surprises: its material, which looks so solid and cold from a
distance, is wood. Indeed, a building whose primary materials are glass and steel manages to be remembered by its rich wood and luxurious red carpet.
Outside, the wood decking of the platform and the wooden screens protecting the books inside the four book towers provide texture and scale on what would otherwise be a forbidding building-scape (even if the need for screens has brought into question the original idea of storing books in transparent glass towers). Inside, a simple palate
of red carpet, wood, and steel are combined in enough ways to lend a sense of cohesion and individuality to a large number of reading rooms arranged around the central sunken garden.