The city's previous central library, in Mount Vernon Square, was donated by industrialist
Andrew Carnegie and dedicated in 1903. A 1961
Booz Allen Hamilton report sponsored by the city government found that the library had become inadequate in size and technology, was located in what was now the city's "worst slum", and that "At any hour of the day or night, a collection of derelicts loaf around the Library and sleep on the curved bench in front." It called for a new library downtown, at an estimated cost of $12 million.
Construction Architect
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe designed the four story, 400,000 square foot (37,000 m2) steel, brick, and glass structure, an example of
modern architecture, in
Washington, D.C. This library was Mies's only public library, and his only building constructed in Washington, D.C.. The library was the first modern design for a building within Washington, D.C which was constituted by the Fine Arts Commission (Travis, S. (2015). The building was completed in 1972 at a cost of $18 million. By the early 2000s, years of deferred facility maintenance had become widely apparent. On June 28, 2007, the
District of Columbia's Historic Preservation Review Board designated the building a historic landmark. The designation, which applies to the exterior as well as interior spaces, seeks to preserve Mies's original design while allowing the library the necessary flexibility to operate. It was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 2007. The building's lobby includes a large mural of
Martin Luther King Jr. created by artist
Don Miller.
Renovation Mecanoo architecture firm was selected to renovate the library, starting on March 4, 2017. The renovation cost $211 million, and the library reopened in 2020 after 3½ years. The entire interior was completely redone, and included a new auditorium, dance studio, recording studios, tool library, offices, and a rooftop garden.
Covid-19 When the library reopened, with limited services, after the renovation, the
COVID-19 pandemic was affecting the United States. The library closed again following a phased management of the pandemic. It was a center for COVID-19 testing and distribution of masks as a contribution in the city's management of
COVID-19, while providing some library services. == Accessibility ==