The Institute was named in honor of
Bern Dibner (1897–1988), who had conceived of it before his death. The Institute was developed and supported by the Dibner Fund he had established in 1957, directed by his son
David Dibner. In 1999, the addition of the 7,000-volume Volterra Collection from Italy increased the Burndy Library collection by more than a third. In 2004 MIT decided not to renew its affiliation, and the Dibner family began looking for a new location to house the collection. David Dibner died unexpectedly in 2005. The Dibner Institute closed in 2006, The acquisition of the Burndy Library (by then numbering 67,000 volumes) transformed the Huntington Library's collections in the history of science and technology into one of the world's largest in that field. The Huntington houses a permanent exhibition,
Beautiful Science: Ideas that Changed the World, in the Dibner Hall of the History of Science that displays approximately 150 books, manuscripts, photographs and objects from both the Burndy Library and the Huntington's non-Burndy holdings in the history of science and medicine. Approximately 200 antique light bulbs from the Burndy Collection are on display in the
Beautiful Science exhibition. The light bulbs are not available for reference or research use, except by special arrangement. The status and accessibility of the Burndy collection of
gas tubes,
vacuum tubes, and
electronic artifacts is not clear from the Huntington website. The Dibner Institute's former building was demolished in early 2007 to make way for new buildings for the
MIT Sloan School of Management. The Dibner name remains at MIT, in the endowed Frances and David Dibner Professorship of the History of Engineering and Manufacturing. == See also ==