The first library of
Bordighera was founded by the British in 1880 and was in the city’s
Anglican Church. In 1910, the British community decided to build a dedicated library on Via Romana to host a growing collection. Funds were gathered by
Clarence Bicknell, who designed a Victorian stone building with a façade embellished by a semi-circular portico, supported by six columns, and made even more beautiful by the presence of a
wisteria now centenary. After the Second World War, the library was bought by the city of
Bordighera and restored in 1985 by the Genoese architect
Gianfranco Franchini, particularly known for his work with
Renzo Piano at the
Centre Pompidou of Paris. The library boasts the title of "International" because it has a collection of about 40,000 volumes in Italian, 20,000 in English, 6,000 in French and 3,000 in German. The library also has a collection of about 950 old, digitized photos of the Victorian Bordighera. == Notes ==