List of New York Public Library branches

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The New York Public Library system includes libraries in Manhattan, the Bronx, and Staten Island. This page is organized by borough, and alphabetically.

The boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens are supported by their own separate library systems.[1]

Research libraries

Library Image Address Historical Note
1 Stephen A. Schwarzman Building (Main Branch)
[1]
New York Public Library-27527.jpg Fifth Avenue at 42nd Street
2 Library for the Performing Arts (Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center)
[2]
LPA at night.jpg 40 Lincoln Center Plaza
3 Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
[3]
Schomburg-center.jpg 515 Malcolm X Boulevard Designed by McKim, Mead & White and opened in 1905.
4 Science, Industry and Business Library
[4]
100px 188 Madison Avenue

Libraries in Manhattan

Library Image Address Historical Note
5 115th Street Library
[5]
100px 203 West 115th Street Designed by McKim, Mead & White and opened in 1907
6 125th Street Library
[6]
NYPL 125th Street Branch, Manhattan.jpg 224 East 125th Street Designed by McKim, Mead & White and opened in 1904.
7 58th Street Library
[7]
127 East 58th Street Originally designed by Carrère & Hastings and opened May 10, 1907. The original building was demolished and replaced by a new branch in two floors of an office tower at 127 East 58th Street, which opened in 1969.
8 67th Street Library
[8]
100px 328 East 67th Street Designed by the firm Babb, Cook, & Willard; and was constructed with funds provided by Andrew Carnegie; built to resemble the Yorkville Branch of the library; renovated in the 1950s, and then again in 2005
9 96th Street Library
[9]
100px 112 East 96th Street Designed by Babb, Cook, & Willard and opened in 1905; constructed with funds provided by Andrew Carnegie.[2]
10 Aguilar Library
[10]
100px 174 East 110th Street Originally named the Aguilar Free Library Society in 1896, for Grace Aguilar, a Sephardic Jewish author; merged with the NYPL in 1905 and moved into a new location that was built using Carnegie funds. The Library is known for its large collection of Spanish titles.[3]
11 Andrew Heiskell Braille and Talking Book Library
[11]
100px 40 West 20th Street
12 Battery Park City Library
[12]
NYPL Murray St BPC evacuation drill jeh 175 North End Avenue Designed by 1100 Architect in 2010.[4]
13 Bloomingdale Library
[13]
100px 150 West 100th Street Opened in 1898 as the Bloomingdale Branch of the New York Free Circulating Library; merged with the New York Public Library in 1901; rebuilt one block east in 1961.
14 Chatham Square Library
[14]
100px 33 East Broadway Opened in 1903 as a branch of the New York Free Circulating Library; rebuilt in 1911 with funds contributed by Andrew Carnegie; one of the busiest branches of the NYPL.
15 Columbus Library
[15]
100px 742 10th Avenue First opened in 1909 and was built using funds contributed by Andrew Carnegie; Columbus Library received major collections from the reading room of the Columbus Catholic club; operated on one floor from the 1970s until 2004, until more rooms were incorporated after a 2005 remodel.
16 Countee Cullen Library [16] 100px 104 West 136th Street Opened on January 14, 1905, originally named The 135th Branch; built using funds contributed by Andrew Carnegie; original building is now part of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture; named for the poet and teacher Countee Cullen, who plays a role in the Harlem Renaissance, in 1951.
17 Donnell Library Center
[17]
100px 20 West 53rd Street Opened in 1955, and closed in 2008; had a large reference and circulating collection.[5]
18 Epiphany Library
[18]
100px 228 East 23rd Street
19 Fort Washington Library
[19]
100px 535 West 179th Street
20 George Bruce Library
[20]
100px 518 West 125th Street
21 Grand Central Library
[21]
100px 135 East 46th Street
22 Hamilton Fish Park Library
[22]
415 East Houston Street
23 Hamiton Grange Library
[23]
100px 503 West 145th Street
24 Harlem Library
[24]
100px 9 West 124th Street
25 Hudson Park Library
[25]
100px 66 Leroy Street
26 Inwood Library
[26]
100px 4790 Broadway
27 Jefferson Market Library
[27]
100px 425 Avenue of the Americas
28 Kips Bay Library
[28]
100px 446 Third Avenue
29 Macomb's Bridge Library
[29]
2650 Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Boulevard
30 Mid-Manhattan Library
[30]
100px 455 Fifth Avenue
31 Morningside Heights Library
[31]
100px 2900 Broadway
32 Muhlenberg Library
[32]
100px 209 West 23rd Street
33 Mulberry Street Library
[33]
100px 10 Jersey Street
34 New Amsterdam Library
[34]
9 Murray Street
35 Ottendorfer Library
[35]
Freie Bibliothek and Deutsches Dispensary 135 Second Avenue
36 Riverside Library
[36]
127 Amsterdam Avenue
37 Roosevelt Island Library
[37]
524 Main Street Opened In 1979 after being located in the Herman and Dorothy Reade apartment, then a community room, for three years.[6]
38 Seward Park Library
[38]
100px 192 East Broadway Originally a Brance of the Aguilar Free Library Society, and was initially built in 1886; the branch that stands today was built with Carnegie funds and opened in 1909.[7]
39 St. Agnes Library
[39]
100px 444 Amsterdam Avenue
40 Terence Cardinal Cooke–Cathedral Library
[40]
560 Lexington Avenue
41 Tompkins Square Library
[41]
NYPL Tompkins Square Branch, Manhattan.jpg 331 East 10th Street
42 Washington Heights Library
[42]
NYPL Washington Heights Branch, Manhattan.jpg 1000 St. Nicholas Avenue
43 Webster Library
[43]
100px 1465 York Avenue Originally part of the Webster Free Library, founded by the East Side House settlement in 1894; absorbed by the NYPL in 1904, and it was set for a new library to be built with funds from Andrew Carnegie's gift to the city.[8]
44 Yorkville Library
[44]
100px 222 East 79th Street Opened in 1902 as the first library built with Carnegie funds; designed by James Brown Lord.[9]

Libraries in the Bronx

Library Image Address Historical Note
45 Allerton Library
[45]
2740 Barnes Avenue Opened in 1960, designed by Hertz and Salerni in conjunction with Department of Public Works.[10]
46 Baychester Library
[46]
2049 Asch Loop North First opened in 1973, and remodeled in 2003.[citation needed]
47 Belmont Library and Enrico Fermi Cultural Center
[47]
610 East 186th Street
48 Bronx Library Center
[48]
100px 310 East Kingsbridge Road
49 Castle Hill Library
[49]
947 Castle Hill Avenue
50 City Island Library
[50]
320 City Island Avenue
51 Clason's Point Library
[51]
1215 Morrison Avenue
52 Eastchester Library
[52]
1385 East Gun Hill Road
53 Edenwald Library
[53]
1255 East 233rd Street
54 Francis Martin Library
[54]
2150 University Avenue
55 Grand Concourse Library
[55]
155 East 173rd Street Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
56 High Bridge Library
[56]
100px 78 West 168th Street
57 Hunt's Point Library
[57]
100px 877 Southern Boulevard
58 Jerome Park Library
[58]
118 Eames Place
59 Kingsbridge Library
[59]
291 West 231st Street
60 Melrose Library
[60]
100px 910 Morris Avenue Opened in 1914 as the first free circulating collection of books in the South Bronx using a portion of Andrew Carnegie's gift to the city; the building was designed by the Carrere and Hastings.[11]
61 Morris Park Library
[61]
985 Morris Park Avenue
62 Morrisania Library
[62]
610 East 169th Street
63 Mosholu Library
[63]
285 East 205th Street Opened in 1954.[12]
64 Mott Haven Library
[64]
100px 321 East 140th Street
65 Parkchester Library
[65]
1985 Westchester Avenue
66 Pelham Bay Library
[66]
3060 Middletown Road
67 Pelham Parkway–Van Nest Library
[67]
2147 Barnes Avenue "The history of the branch goes back to 1912, when it was first established as a station of NYPL's Travelling Libraries program, bringing library books to neighborhoods that didn't yet have branches. The Van Nest sub-branch opened in 1917, and occupied a series of small, but progressively larger storefront locations around the neighborhood, until it moved to its current location in 1968."[13] After years of "clamoring"[14] and "an unprecedented amount of support" for the renaming of the branch, the Van Nest Library was renamed Pelham Parkway-Van Nest on August 27, 2014.[15]
68 Riverdale Library
[68]
5540 Mosholu Avenue
69 Sedgwick Library
[69]
1701 Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard
70 Soundview Library
[70]
660 Soundview Avenue
71 Spuyten Duyvil Library
[71]
650 West 235th Street
72 Throg's Neck Library
[72]
3025 Cross Bronx Expressway Extension
73 Tremont Library
[73]
1866 Washington Avenue
74 Van Cortlandt Library
[74]
3874 Sedgwick Avenue
75 Wakefield Library
[75]
4100 Lowerre Place
76 West Farms Library
[76]
2085 Honeywell Avenue
77 Westchester Square Library
[77]
2521 Glebe Avenue
78 Woodlawn Heights Library
[78]
4355 Katonah Avenue
79 Woodstock Library
[79]
761 East 160th Street Temporarily closed

Libraries in Staten Island

Library Image Address Historical Note
80 Dongan Hills Library
[80]
1617 Richmond Road
81 Great Kills Library
[81]
Great Kills NYPL jeh 56 Giffords Lane
82 Huguenot Park Library
[82]
100px 830 Huguenot Avenue
83 Mariner's Harbor Library
[83]
206 South Avenue Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
84 New Dorp Library
[84]
309 New Dorp Lane First opened in 1907, then moved several times. In 1910, the branch moved to a real estate office owned by a local resident, in 1920 the community provided and maintained the library building, then in 1926, the library became part of the NYPL system. Finally, the branch moved to a store building, renamed the "James Watson Hughes Memorial Library," in 1928.[16]
85 Port Richmond Library
[85]
100px 75 Bennett Street
86 Richmondtown Library
[86]
100px 200 Clarke Avenue
87 South Beach Library
[87]
South Beach NYPL jeh 21-25 Robin Road
88 St. George Library Center
[88]
100px 5 Central Avenue Opened June 1907, designed by Carrère and Hastings and built using Carnegie funds.[17]
89 Stapleton Library
[89]
100px 132 Canal Street
90 Todt Hill–Westerleigh Library
[90]
2550 Victory Boulevard
91 Tottenville Library
[91]
Tottenville NYPL jeh.JPG 7430 Amboy Road
92 West New Brighton Library
[92]
976 Castleton Avenue

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Dain, Phyllis. 2000. The New York Public Library: a universe of knowledge. New York: New York Public Library in association with Scala Publishers, London.
  • Dierickx, Mary B. (1996). The Architecture of Literacy: The Carnegie Libraries of New York City. New York: Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art and the New York City Dept. of General Services. ISBN 1-56256-717-9.

External links