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Alexandria Revisited: Another Look at Space and Growth

Sheila Dowd (Was Assistant University Librarian for Collection Development at the University of California, Berkley, until her recent retirement.)

Collection Building

ISSN: 0160-4953

Article publication date: 1 March 1989

43

Abstract

A little over a decade ago, a major library problem was formulated in arresting and witty terms. The growth of library collections, and the consequent pressure for growth of library buildings, was the subject of a conference of the Associated Colleges of the Midwest; and the conference, which proved to be seminal to the next decade of managerial thought, proclaimed that we were “Touching Bottom in the Bottomless Pit.” So we bade Farewell to Alexandria—that is, to the purported dream of all libraries, infinite expansion. In the same period the University Grants Committee of Great Britain was studying the same question. They, with the authority of the governmental voice, mandated a fixed size for British university libraries—a “no growth” policy. In the ensuring years, “no growth” has been a policy for some libraries, an uncomfortable physical fact for many others.

Citation

Dowd, S. (1989), "Alexandria Revisited: Another Look at Space and Growth", Collection Building, Vol. 9 No. 3/4, pp. 65-72. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb023258

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1989, MCB UP Limited

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