Cardiff Free Library (1861 to 1882) In 1861, a free library was set up by voluntary subscription above the St Mary Street entrance to the Royal Arcade in Cardiff. By 1862, the
Public Libraries Act 1855 allowed local councils with 5,000 inhabitants or more to raise a rate of one
penny in the
pound to provide a
public library. Cardiff was the first town in Wales to establish a public library. Two years later in 1864, the library had moved to bigger premises in the now demolished
YMCA building in
St Mary Street. A School of Science and Art and a small museum was also added, and so it became known as the Cardiff Free Library, Museum and Schools for Science and Art.
Old Library (1882 to 1988) The Old Library is located at the northern end of
The Hayes. A public holiday was declared when it was opened on 31 May 1882 by the Lord Mayor of Cardiff, Alfred Thomas as the Cardiff Free Library, Museum and Schools for Science and Art, which included an art gallery. A competition was held to choose a design for the Cardiff Free Library, Museum and Schools for Science and Art. The winning design was by architects James,
Seward and Thomas, erected for just over £9,000. The building was further extended to the south fourteen years later, with a new south frontage designed by James, Seward & Thomas, and was officially re-opened as the Central Library by the
Prince of Wales on 27 July 1896. The entrance to the building featured a corridor lined with ornamental wall tiles, designed to depict the four seasons and night and morning. These tiles were impressed with coloured clay to give the impression of a
mosaic. The Old Library (as it is now known) still exists and is in used by the
Cardiff Story and a tourist information centre.
St David's Link (1988 to 2006) The Central Library was moved to a new building located on St David's Link (Frederick Street), opposite what was then the
multi-storey car park. The building was officially opened on 3 December 1988, and occupied the upper storeys of the commercial complex, which were accessed via a polygonal
vestibule at street level. The first floor contained the fiction and children's sections and reading library. The second floor contained the non-fiction section and the third floor housed the local history section. The building was demolished in late 2006 together with the surrounding retail units to make way for the extension to
St. David's Centre.
Temporary building (2006 to 2009) During the construction of the new building, library services were moved to temporary facilities on John Street which were officially opened on 1 September 2006. Consisting of two separate buildings adjoining the
Welsh National Opera, the front overlooking
Bute Street, featured tall
hoardings illustrating the spines of a number of books identified as those most commonly borrowed from the library. ==Cardiff Central Library (2009– )==