The Gothenburg University Library, was originally known as the "Gothenburg Museum Library, Gothenburg University Library and Gothenburg City Library" (
Göteborgs musei, Göteborgs högskolas bibliotek och Göteborgs stadsbibliotek). It is an
academic library and the main library for the University of Gothenburg. The largest of its libraries is situated at Renströmsparken behind
Götaplatsen in Gothenburg.
1800s The foundation for the library was laid early through donations. During the end of the 1850s, the institution that later became known as the Gothenburg Natural History Museum, had assembled a museum library in a gallery on the top floor of the east wing in the original building. The collection contained about 1,000 volumes, that had been bequeathed to the museum in 1844, by the physician to the Royal Court of Sweden Johan P Westring, another 500 books were donated from the
Royal Society of Sciences and Letters in Gothenburg and finally 300 books came from the library of the County Agricultural Society. When the Gothenburg Museum (later included in the
Gothenburg City Museum) was inaugurated on 20 December 1861, the collections were moved there. The only money the library received during the first years, was an annual grant of 500
SEK from the museum. The grant was increased to 700 SEK in 1870. In 1863, the size of the collection was estimated to 5,000 volumes, 10,000 in 1869, close to 30,000 in 1879 and approximately 50,000 in 1886.
1900s A new building for the Gothenburg City Library was inaugurated on 6 October 1900, at
Haga kyrkoplan. In 1995, this was to become the Literature and Journals Library, its primary function was to supply literature for the Gothenburg Institution. The name of the library was changed to Library for Social Studies in 2013. The current Gothenburg City Library originates from the Dickson Public Library (
Dicksonska folkbiblioteket), it got its present name in 1967, when the library moved to a building at Götaplatsen. When the State Medical University of Gothenburg was formed in 1948, the Gothenburg City Library got a section for medical literature on 1 July 1948, financed by the Swedish government. The Gothenburg Institute and the Medical University were merged in 1954, to form the State University of Gothenburg. The City Library, which remained under the management of the
Gothenburg Municipality, vacated the premises at
Haga kyrkoplan the same year and moved to Renströmsgatan 4 at
Näckrosdammen. The new premises were opened on 14 June 1954, and officially inaugurated on 1 September. The buildings consists of the foundations of an older complex, The Memorial (
Minneshallen), which was built for the
Gothenburg Tercentennial Jubilee Exposition in 1923, and a new part designed by architect Ärland Noreen. The building of the new part started in 1951 and continued until April 1954, when the move, which took 64 days, started. The cost for the build was 5,246,000 SEK. The halls of the library had of shelves, the books occupied some of these. An extension to the library was added in 1984. The extension was designed by the architect company
Coordinator.
Library institution On 1 January 1961, the library became a State Institution under the name of Gothenburg University Library (
Göteborgs universitetsbibliotek). The biomedical library was designed by architect Klas Anshelm. The libraries belonging the Gothenburg University Library are: • Library for Music and Drama (
Biblioteket för musik och dramatik) • Biomedical Library (
Biomedicinska biblioteket) • Humanities Library (
Humanistiska biblioteket) • Library of Economics (
Ekonomiska biblioteket) • Library of Geolocical Science (
Geovetenskapliga biblioteket) • Art Library (
Konstbiblioteket) • Library of Education (
Pedagogiska biblioteket) • Library for Social Studies (
Samhällsvetenskapliga biblioteket) • Hälsovetarbacken Library (
Hälsovetarbackens bibliotek) == Library of Economics ==