Pre WW1 architecture was unbelievably graceful and refined... The fact that a few of such classical majestic buildings with even some baroque touches were even built in north America is great....
Get ready for the future. Bio mimicry and Organic design alongside the concepts of computational and parametric design is greatly influencing architecture....
I visited the library in 2014 on holiday, this was one of the highlights of my holiday. I heard at Sesame street was going to be here but was at another library, it I saw big bird in central park, I spent most of my youth being called big bird (I was big in size and surname was bird lol)
@@angelabird4794 Funny about Big Bird in Central Park. If you just keep walking through Manhattan, you will see many more crazy characters than Big Bird, lol.
Wait, you don't like the MTV Cribs series? Why not?? Sorry, I had to. I understood you, and kind of agree. One don't have to choose between either, as architecture of private homes can be very interesting, too. The old world official buildings are PACKED with symbolism that one don't notice at a first glance, so videos like these are incredible, though.
Homes aren't intended for public consumption. This was, pointedly. Acts of generosity like this have been shirked: ignored by beneficiaries, and relegated to "the government" by the people with actual taxable income (prior to using every loophole unimagineable). This content doesn't just matter, it's critical to maintaining a civil democracy. Stupid American money. Seriously. Too many f*ing rich people don't read anything that doesn't help them accrue more wealth.
Honestly it's amazing that this historic library is still open to the public. If I lived in NY, I would go as much as possible. Be very proud to have this Majestic place.
I can't articulate how much I love this series. First the video on Grand Central and now this. Absolutely stunning! Keep up the excellent work, I can't wait to see more content of this nature.
Wow, this was just stunning! I'm so embarrassed that I've been to the main library less than a handful of times in the over 4 decades I've been (born and raised) living here. I've stood on Fifth Avenue, waiting for a bus, with this behind me and it's never occurred to me to go in and take a look. This was a wonderful reminder to me to be more of a tourist in my own city!
As a lover of books and a genealogist, I would be in library heaven in this magnificent structure. You NYC folks have so many beautiful buildings to be proud of, and the NYC Public Library has to rank as one of the greatest. Cheers from the Southern U.S.
I am old enough to remember when libraries were where you went to find stuff out, and had the luck of living in NYC and actually doing research, from books, in the Rose Reading Room. Too bad I didn't realize how awesome it was. For me it was school work and drudgery. As Joni said, you never know what you've got till it's gone.
@phuck ewe True, and thank God, but I'm reminded of another line from the song, where they take all the trees, put'em in a tree museum, and charge the people a dollar and a half just to see'em. 'Fraid that's what'll happen to books.
A STUNNING TOUR OF THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY ON 5TH AVE! Lots of gorgeous details! Used to hang out here when I lived in NYC a few times and when I was little used to eat hot chestnuts in the winter from a small brown paper bag on the front steps near those old Lion heads when we visited NYC on the weekends. My late godfather used to work in Periodicals here in the 1950s and I remember visiting him here. The most fascinating thing is this great Beaux Arts building sits where the massive Croton Reservoir used to be encased in a gigantic Egyptian tomb like building where it's said the late great Edgar Allan Poe used to walk around the promenade on top around the perimeter of the reservoir! So technically this library would have been under water during the mid to late 1800s until it was torn down. Apparently, one can still see the remnants of the foundation of that massive Egyptian edifice in the basement! Thanks so much for sharing....great job!
Excellent. In my early 20s when I was dirt poor and now that life has blessed me tremendously (I live a few blocks away in Murray Hill), this library and Bryant Park have always been my reading oasis.
i mostly agree.... but the complete lack of stabilization (either via gimbal or stabilizer) in conjunction with the editor's choice to speed up the footage in short bursts leads to discombobulation and eye strain. it kinda seems like they got permission to film, then just sent a kid in with a list of rooms & items to film and a dslr... perhaps it wouldn't make me dizzy if i wasn't sick, but other videos don't have the same effect. love the series concept though....
@@kevinobyrne8020 I also find something different about the way this was shot and edited. I have no idea on video making, but keen to try and replicate this style , any pointers ?
Fell in love with this Beautiful building when I was in High School (1974-1978) on visits to New York to see my Uncle. Fill in love again when they destroyed it in the movie The Day After Tomorrow. The scene where they are in the Rose Reading room gathering books to burn in the fireplace to keep warm always gets to me. The One guy (as the small group of survivors is being air lifted out) refuses to leave with out the Gideon Bible.
Absolutely amazing. I've visited from London, England a few times. Always blown away by the scale, quality and refinement of Beaux-Arts buildings in the US. We have nothing to compare in terms of public buildings.
I clicked on this expecting a few facts about some murals, some statues, some architectural details, etc, but I am stunned by all of it. I can't believe the amount of forethought and design, the tiny details like book trolleys! And the stacks extending out beneath the park, books below, ice skaters above. I have been to the library, I have seen some of it, but now I know I have to go back and basically vacation there until my regret for having overlooked this place goes away. Amazing job, AD.
I think I'm in love with the rose reading room , I mean who wouldn't fall in love with a place like that , the way the sunlight hits those wooden tables is spectacular. Love at first sight . Even tho I haven't been there in person , I fell in love with that place because of this amazing video.
@@BadWithNames123 obviously the US is far too busy making bombs for the saudis to blow up school children in Yemen. Can't afford less than 1% of the military budget to build something as frivolous as a public library. /s
I've leisurely visited NYC several times over the past few years and I fall more in love with the city's architecture & history each time. I'm only now putting this library on my itinerary for my next trip up there this weekend since it'll be close to where I'm staying this time around. So excited to see all of this in person with an enriched perspective! Absolutely beautiful.
New York city is an elegant architectural revelation. Grand central, the library, it's bridges, arches, points near Rockefeller Center, city hall and so so soo much more. I anticipated that New York would surprise me, but its architectural heritage and history blew me away. Gorgeous :).
You know, I know the library from 1983 to 1984 and I'm still work there. I've been working there for 38 years. Is a beautiful libraries as good for children, and it's good for in adults and then it's good for college people and it's good for the people who's in college and people was the regular school program, but it's a beautiful building and been there for a long time. So I got about four more years to retire, but that's another story. Like I said, it is a beautiful building. Believe me. I work there. I know how it is. I will bring my grandchildren over there to the library. It keeps them a lot. That's my opinion.
I can say that I visited the NY Public Library and I absolutely loved it!! So much history! It’s a gem for all New Yorkers and the world. I’d love to visit again! Thanks for sharing!
This was a brilliantly conducted tour. When I was completing my Master's in Library Services at Columbia, we were given a tour, and this has been even better. At that time, 1971. while marveling at the whole, our group was transfixed by the Gutenberg Bible. seeing a copy of the Declaration of Independence, and an early map. Scholars in the main reading room were in rows --wearing cotton gloves-- sitting by elegant green shaded lamps, and we got shushed . Two points may be of interest. First. and sadly, the main entrance hall was once lined with marble benches. The reality of New York's homeless men caused all to be removed. Part of our grad school learning (for those who would be working in a city) was this harbinger. My second point was that the catalog drawers lining the walls are now empty. A quiet and superb effort over years has resulted in the availability of scrolling through a computer (previously cranking through a film or a microfiche) .
Wonderful! Our family was privileged to experience the New York Public Library in 2018, at the time of our younger son’s wedding! We all loved the Rose Reading Room, and the hall outside with the murals of the history of the printed word. Wish we could have spent more time there, but it was truly unforgettable.
Visited this library for the first time with my friend and it was so great to be able to get a background on where we have been! Kind of like a free tour 😂
As a native NY'er and amateur Architecture nerd, I really enjoy the AD series on the legendary building of the city that I have walked through all my life. Thank you
I love these videos. Because of the stories and details behind these buildings, but also since I can't go there myself -- I'm from the Netherlands, and travelling to NY isn't cheap. Please keep making these!
Maybe not cheap but can still be done on a budget. Don't go during peak season. Flights from Amsterdam are actually among the cheapest, as there are many cheaper indirect flights to choose from (around 400 EUR, sometimes even less).
Saw NY public library in the adjustment bureau and was blown away by it AND the US customs House. Cannot wait to visit one day. New yorkers are blessed 😊
P.S. Did you know that there's a classic movie from the 1930s with Fred McMurray and Claudette Colbert where they're sitting on that side marble seat outside to the side of the building and they're eating from a bag of popcorn? Can't think of the name of that movie right now, but I thought that was of interest! Don't know whether it was filmed in NYC or a set but they didn't shoot on location back then if at all so it was probably a set but looked like the real thing. Love the new restaurant in the back and didn't realize that there were fountains out front. They've done a fabulous job with the restoration and landscaping...gorgeous!! I've shared this on FB with all my friends and family, well worth watching! Thanks again~
The Rose Reading Room is one of my favorite places on Earth. I whiled away many an hour doing graduate study there a couple decades ago and I still miss that environment so much!
When I was younger I came here often. I used the rare book room when I did my master degree. I loved it but I wish I knew any of this I would have appreciated it even more. I will look at this with new sense of awe.
I live in New York and work in the area, I never knew there is so many exclusive private room to the library! I feel like I was given a private tour which is wonderful! Thank you!
I LOVE this Library. Its stunning! The design and architecture is impeccable. I can sit there all day and there is always something new to look at, besides books.
This is a tremendous video, which I absolutely love. So, it pains me to say it, but there is an error. The seal which was highlighted on the table in the periodical room is that of New York City, not New York State. Thank you, Architectural Digest, for this terrific series. What an absolutely stunning and endlessly fascinating building. And we didn’t even get to the wonderful galleries throughout the spaces. An absolute treasure.
also 1:44 on the right hand side image, the exit to the street, it is a street to the horizon, giving the feeling that with knowledge now, you can go as far as the eye can see... amazingly astonishing messages felt and then understood. Check the garden at the back side. The buildings bend outwards just to give the impression that the library is grand and has body up where the long apartments stay. It is rightfully a great sign of respect to knowledge and its servants. Amazing language of architecture to the max here. It feels so much similar to Istanbul in its thicking clocks and blowing winds...
This is exactly the reason I love NY. It's the American capital of art and culture, thanks largely to its dominant position over the centuries as capital of commerce. Commerce and the wealth it attracts have always fostered art and culture, as it is an expression of human ideals that can only be achieved through hard work and plenty of resources. Similarly, in Europe, we have cities like Florence, Venice, Paris etc.
Always love to visit this library every time I go to NYC. This video will make my next visit more meaningful. Thank you, especially the behind-the-scenes working system. Fascinating and extraordinary. In fact, I have been including public libraries in my world travel.
When I was little more than the equivalent of a newly printed booklet, my father took me to the Reading Room and showed me how to use the walled index cards.. It was a rite of passage, a baptism and an initiation into a world I have called home ever since.
There´s no more to say but thanks for taking us through the massivness of this notable building in Midtown. Content that matters, keep doing this guys..
I live in L.A and just by looking at these vids, New York is the type of city that is quite enjoyable and fabulous to live and explore if and only if you have the time and more importantly the money.
because minimalism is so much more beautiful. decorative ceilings with carvings and paintings? how about just a white concrete ceiling with cables. really puts the mind at ease
In 1964 I worked for the NYPL, Soundview Branch. I’ve been to the main library a couple of times. I found it gorgeous but overwhelming. When my mother was a girl, about 1925, she used to skip school. The school administrators said she went to 14th street and was picking up sailors. Actually she was at the NYPL, reading.
Wow, only 9 years to build all of that! There is a structure being built in my city that has been under construction for over 3 years now and so far all they have done is dug a foundation hole and erected an the place where the elevators and stairs are. They really got stuff done in the old days.
I don't mean to be that guy but at 18:22 in the Periodical Room the commentator calls the seal on the table "the seal of the State of New York" when it's actually the seal of the City of New York. Just a heads up on an otherwise an amazing vid. Been there several times and now I can appreciate it even more!
I used to work on 44th and 5th ave and spent my lunch hour sittin' on the steps of this branch back in the late 1970's/ early 80's. A freakin' awesome building. Not too shabby inside either. Fuhgeddaboudit!
Pre WW1 architecture was unbelievably graceful and refined... The fact that a few of such classical majestic buildings with even some baroque touches were even built in north America is great....
Now we know where the origins are derived from.
This woman is talking BS.look at it Paul Bartlet did nothing.its all lies
Get ready for the future. Bio mimicry and Organic design alongside the concepts of computational and parametric design is greatly influencing architecture....
@@cyndeeratledge3093 where?
For all of us who haven’t been able to visit yet, thank you for giving us the next best thing with this tour. Majestic!
I visited the library in 2014 on holiday, this was one of the highlights of my holiday. I heard at Sesame street was going to be here but was at another library, it I saw big bird in central park, I spent most of my youth being called big bird (I was big in size and surname was bird lol)
@@angelabird4794 Funny about Big Bird in Central Park. If you just keep walking through Manhattan, you will see many more crazy characters than Big Bird, lol.
So fascinating! So much better than celebrities homes! Keep up THIS type of content. Content that MATTERS.
Wait, you don't like the MTV Cribs series? Why not??
Sorry, I had to. I understood you, and kind of agree. One don't have to choose between either, as architecture of private homes can be very interesting, too. The old world official buildings are PACKED with symbolism that one don't notice at a first glance, so videos like these are incredible, though.
Leinad Esuark All that to store worthless knowledge, 😜 crazy.
Leinad Esuark it’s not all that impressive when you’re actually there. I was bored actually
You right bro.
Homes aren't intended for public consumption. This was, pointedly. Acts of generosity like this have been shirked: ignored by beneficiaries, and relegated to "the government" by the people with actual taxable income (prior to using every loophole unimagineable). This content doesn't just matter, it's critical to maintaining a civil democracy.
Stupid American money. Seriously. Too many f*ing rich people don't read anything that doesn't help them accrue more wealth.
Honestly it's amazing that this historic library is still open to the public. If I lived in NY, I would go as much as possible. Be very proud to have this Majestic place.
I can't articulate how much I love this series. First the video on Grand Central and now this. Absolutely stunning! Keep up the excellent work, I can't wait to see more content of this nature.
Cool
Wow, this was just stunning! I'm so embarrassed that I've been to the main library less than a handful of times in the over 4 decades I've been (born and raised) living here. I've stood on Fifth Avenue, waiting for a bus, with this behind me and it's never occurred to me to go in and take a look. This was a wonderful reminder to me to be more of a tourist in my own city!
It's true that we often take whatever beautiful things around us for granted. This library will definitely make you love and feel proud of your city.
I'm from Tulsa and I found the NY Library breathtaking. I'm so glad my daughter and I went inside.
Absolutely agree. Same here. I think I went in there twice.
HOW
As a lover of books and a genealogist, I would be in library heaven in this magnificent structure. You NYC folks have so many beautiful buildings to be proud of, and the NYC Public Library has to rank as one of the greatest. Cheers from the Southern U.S.
yes :) ty
I am old enough to remember when libraries were where you went to find stuff out, and had the luck of living in NYC and actually doing research, from books, in the Rose Reading Room. Too bad I didn't realize how awesome it was. For me it was school work and drudgery. As Joni said, you never know what you've got till it's gone.
@phuck ewe True, and thank God, but I'm reminded of another line from the song, where they take all the trees, put'em in a tree museum, and charge the people a dollar and a half just to see'em. 'Fraid that's what'll happen to books.
R W • Or a line from the great Room 222: “Book? What’s a book?”
phuck ewe • Bingo! 😂
Ash... is still just taking a long nap there
😭
noo 😭
rgbrtbretbvyteyhh legit was expecting the comments to be like this
I WAS LOOKING FOR THIS COMMENT
😀
A STUNNING TOUR OF THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY ON 5TH AVE! Lots of gorgeous details! Used to hang out here when I lived in NYC a few times and when I was little used to eat hot chestnuts in the winter from a small brown paper bag on the front steps near those old Lion heads when we visited NYC on the weekends. My late godfather used to work in Periodicals here in the 1950s and I remember visiting him here. The most fascinating thing is this great Beaux Arts building sits where the massive Croton Reservoir used to be encased in a gigantic Egyptian tomb like building where it's said the late great Edgar Allan Poe used to walk around the promenade on top around the perimeter of the reservoir! So technically this library would have been under water during the mid to late 1800s until it was torn down. Apparently, one can still see the remnants of the foundation of that massive Egyptian edifice in the basement! Thanks so much for sharing....great job!
Excellent. In my early 20s when I was dirt poor and now that life has blessed me tremendously (I live a few blocks away in Murray Hill), this library and Bryant Park have always been my reading oasis.
i LOVE the way this was filmed!
i mostly agree.... but the complete lack of stabilization (either via gimbal or stabilizer) in conjunction with the editor's choice to speed up the footage in short bursts leads to discombobulation and eye strain. it kinda seems like they got permission to film, then just sent a kid in with a list of rooms & items to film and a dslr... perhaps it wouldn't make me dizzy if i wasn't sick, but other videos don't have the same effect.
love the series concept though....
This is a computer rendering and not a video. I am impressed with the rendering quality. I wonder what program was used to create this presentation?
same
@@Mike-dy8bq This is a video taken normally with a camera. Why would you think otherwise?
@@kevinobyrne8020 I also find something different about the way this was shot and edited. I have no idea on video making, but keen to try and replicate this style , any pointers ?
love the changing in voices, keeps my brain attentive!
Exactly 😊
Fell in love with this Beautiful building when I was in High School (1974-1978) on visits to New York to see my Uncle. Fill in love again when they destroyed it in the movie The Day After Tomorrow. The scene where they are in the Rose Reading room gathering books to burn in the fireplace to keep warm always gets to me. The One guy (as the small group of survivors is being air lifted out) refuses to leave with out the Gideon Bible.
The Day After Tomorrow, and Sex and The City, the movie, where Big leaves Carrie waiting on those steps leading up to the catalog room. 😄
Absolutely amazing. I've visited from London, England a few times. Always blown away by the scale, quality and refinement of Beaux-Arts buildings in the US. We have nothing to compare in terms of public buildings.
This is why I love old architecture, built with such detail, thought and charm!
Oh my god, it was like a time travel. The stunning library has literally everything you ever needed. New Yorkers are so lucky.
I clicked on this expecting a few facts about some murals, some statues, some architectural details, etc, but I am stunned by all of it. I can't believe the amount of forethought and design, the tiny details like book trolleys! And the stacks extending out beneath the park, books below, ice skaters above. I have been to the library, I have seen some of it, but now I know I have to go back and basically vacation there until my regret for having overlooked this place goes away. Amazing job, AD.
I think I'm in love with the rose reading room , I mean who wouldn't fall in love with a place like that , the way the sunlight hits those wooden tables is spectacular. Love at first sight . Even tho I haven't been there in person , I fell in love with that place because of this amazing video.
I love this series so much!!
beautiful. too bad we won't see anything like this build again since everything is minimalistic these days.
it cost $230 million in modern USD to build so... i can see why minimalism is popular
@@BadWithNames123 obviously the US is far too busy making bombs for the saudis to blow up school children in Yemen. Can't afford less than 1% of the military budget to build something as frivolous as a public library. /s
Names-Can you say, handy Billionaires?
Quinton Ashley, lighten up. It's just a library.
They build things low quality now
I've leisurely visited NYC several times over the past few years and I fall more in love with the city's architecture & history each time. I'm only now putting this library on my itinerary for my next trip up there this weekend since it'll be close to where I'm staying this time around. So excited to see all of this in person with an enriched perspective! Absolutely beautiful.
the building is majestic and a true ode to classical architecture...love this tour! can't wait to see it in person!
New York city is an elegant architectural revelation. Grand central, the library, it's bridges, arches, points near Rockefeller Center, city hall and so so soo much more.
I anticipated that New York would surprise me, but its architectural heritage and history blew me away.
Gorgeous :).
yes :) its pretty rad
Love that the reading room has so many important classic details. Reading is the key.
Please make more of these
You know, I know the library from 1983 to 1984 and I'm still work there. I've been working there for 38 years. Is a beautiful libraries as good for children, and it's good for in adults and then it's good for college people and it's good for the people who's in college and people was the regular school program, but it's a beautiful building and been there for a long time. So I got about four more years to retire, but that's another story. Like I said, it is a beautiful building. Believe me. I work there. I know how it is. I will bring my grandchildren over there to the library. It keeps them a lot. That's my opinion.
So many beautiful memories, I used to spend time at the library every day and do my homework there in peace and tranquility.
The narrating is marvelous. It is professional, welcoming, and informative. Love this video tour of such a grand space!
Agree.
my soul is always with this library.
I have never been to NYPL, what a stunning place, it's a museum and one must look around and enjoy the gorgeous architecture. Amazing place!
I can say that I visited the NY Public Library and I absolutely loved it!! So much history! It’s a gem for all New Yorkers and the world. I’d love to visit again! Thanks for sharing!
"Sayonara New York, Sayonara America, But I wont say sayonara to you Ash. Because this isnt a goodbye, I know we'll see each other again.. someday" 💔
I was having a good, happy day, but *not anymore* 🙃
It's such a majestic building not only coz of it's size but also the past it holds. Thank you for such a beautiful video
these "insights" into famous NYC buildings are my favourite . Please keep on doing them !!!
This was a brilliantly conducted tour. When I was completing my Master's in Library Services at Columbia, we were given a tour, and this has been even better.
At that time, 1971. while marveling at the whole, our group was transfixed by the Gutenberg Bible. seeing a copy of the Declaration of Independence, and an early map.
Scholars in the main reading room were in rows --wearing cotton gloves-- sitting by elegant green shaded lamps, and we got shushed .
Two points may be of interest. First. and sadly, the main entrance hall was once lined with marble benches. The reality of New York's homeless men caused all to be removed. Part of our grad school learning (for those who would be working in a city) was this harbinger.
My second point was that the catalog drawers lining the walls are now empty. A quiet and superb effort over years has resulted in the availability of scrolling through a computer (previously cranking through a film or a microfiche) .
Wonderful! Our family was privileged to experience the New York Public Library in 2018, at the time of our younger son’s wedding! We all loved the Rose Reading Room, and the hall outside with the murals of the history of the printed word. Wish we could have spent more time there, but it was truly unforgettable.
I would love to smell some of those 📚...one of my favorite smells very nostalgic
The library in Eugene Oregon is beautiful but smells like a putrid homeless person.
This video is a stunning accomplishment. Thank you to everyone involved.
OMG!
I love libraries.
I have never been to this one but I would love to visit.
Thank you for this wonderful video.
I really appreciate it.
this comment made my day you have a great mind and a talent for this and made my day
It is worth visiting. I “lived” in the reading room when attending graduate school during the 70s. I love the NYPL.
Visited this library for the first time with my friend and it was so great to be able to get a background on where we have been! Kind of like a free tour 😂
This was on of the most exciting videos I've ever watched! Thank you AD!!!
Yes . I'm a bookworm too .
So crazy. So many books. Reminds me of the library of Alexandria. So much knowledge that was lost back then.
When I lived in the US, libraries were my favourite places. So many stunning ones!
This tour was amazing! So informative and well filmed!
As a native NY'er and amateur Architecture nerd, I really enjoy the AD series on the legendary building of the city that I have walked through all my life. Thank you
I love these videos. Because of the stories and details behind these buildings, but also since I can't go there myself -- I'm from the Netherlands, and travelling to NY isn't cheap.
Please keep making these!
Maybe not cheap but can still be done on a budget. Don't go during peak season. Flights from Amsterdam are actually among the cheapest, as there are many cheaper indirect flights to choose from (around 400 EUR, sometimes even less).
I'm Dutch and it's not that expensive. Tickets are not expensive and Airbnb ..
this made my day you have a great mind and a talent for this and made my day
Noatak Kenway same here! But all my friends call me crazy, i want to go so badly
Saw NY public library in the adjustment bureau and was blown away by it AND the US customs House.
Cannot wait to visit one day. New yorkers are blessed 😊
I always walk past the library but have never gone in, I’ll be sure to check it out now
New York is so packed with architectural gems. It’s such an impressive city
WOW!!!!!!! What a magnificent structure!!!! All that is involved in the making of this is overwhelming
Unbelieveable, I wish I see this video 10 years ago when my family lived in New York City, and I should visit it definitely
P.S. Did you know that there's a classic movie from the 1930s with Fred McMurray and Claudette Colbert where they're sitting on that side marble seat outside to the side of the building and they're eating from a bag of popcorn? Can't think of the name of that movie right now, but I thought that was of interest! Don't know whether it was filmed in NYC or a set but they didn't shoot on location back then if at all so it was probably a set but looked like the real thing. Love the new restaurant in the back and didn't realize that there were fountains out front. They've done a fabulous job with the restoration and landscaping...gorgeous!! I've shared this on FB with all my friends and family, well worth watching! Thanks again~
The Rose Reading Room is one of my favorite places on Earth. I whiled away many an hour doing graduate study there a couple decades ago and I still miss that environment so much!
This series is so phenomenal. Thank you @Architecturaldigest for this content! Please continue feeding our brains and inspiring our curiosity. Cheers!
When I was younger I came here often. I used the rare book room when I did my master degree. I loved it but I wish I knew any of this I would have appreciated it even more. I will look at this with new sense of awe.
Ain’t gunna lie I just wanna go there one day to put flowers or smt for ash😭💔😿
I WANTED THIS COMMENT
😔🔫
sskigdwhis Please I didn't intend to cry today
Same
SAME I’M LITERALLY GONNA TRAVEL TO NYC ONE DAY JUST TO PUT FLOWERS FOR OUR BOY😟🤞
I live in New York and work in the area, I never knew there is so many exclusive private room to the library! I feel like I was given a private tour which is wonderful! Thank you!
I would really love to see other civic architecture like the national Capitol and other buildings in DC. Your analyses are really wonderful to watch!
I would prefer the Capitol building not be surveyed, for future domestic terrorists.
I LOVE this Library. Its stunning! The design and architecture is impeccable. I can sit there all day and there is always something new to look at, besides books.
YES!! FINALLY!! Another "Details" video!! Thank you so much!! Keep 'em coming!!!
The combination of the library and Bryant Park makes one of the best urban places on earth.
New York is still waiting on the whole "patience" thing!!
How is this series not continuing !?! This is the best, please revisit and continue to release content like this!
I absolutely love this series more please! So much NY history to be passed down
As a bibliophile this is heaven on earth , lucky New Yorkers ❤
This is a tremendous video, which I absolutely love. So, it pains me to say it, but there is an error. The seal which was highlighted on the table in the periodical room is that of New York City, not New York State.
Thank you, Architectural Digest, for this terrific series. What an absolutely stunning and endlessly fascinating building. And we didn’t even get to the wonderful galleries throughout the spaces. An absolute treasure.
also 1:44 on the right hand side image, the exit to the street, it is a street to the horizon, giving the feeling that with knowledge now, you can go as far as the eye can see... amazingly astonishing messages felt and then understood. Check the garden at the back side. The buildings bend outwards just to give the impression that the library is grand and has body up where the long apartments stay. It is rightfully a great sign of respect to knowledge and its servants. Amazing language of architecture to the max here. It feels so much similar to Istanbul in its thicking clocks and blowing winds...
WE NEED MORE VIDEOS LIKE THISSS
This is such a beautiful building. There are so many hidden surprises you see if you wander through the rooms.
please do a series on the wonderful public secret doors of New York , which so few realize is there for them to enjoy and use !
This is exactly the reason I love NY. It's the American capital of art and culture, thanks largely to its dominant position over the centuries as capital of commerce. Commerce and the wealth it attracts have always fostered art and culture, as it is an expression of human ideals that can only be achieved through hard work and plenty of resources. Similarly, in Europe, we have cities like Florence, Venice, Paris etc.
agreed. it’s one of the artistic and architectural capitals of the world
Fantastic tour! Casual yet super informative
Always love to visit this library every time I go to NYC. This video will make my next visit more meaningful. Thank you, especially the behind-the-scenes working system. Fascinating and extraordinary.
In fact, I have been including public libraries in my world travel.
Thanks for sharing this. It’s quite interesting. I was at Bryant Park last summer and didn’t know that this national landmark is right next to it. 😮
This is my favorite building in New York, and I learned so much -- please keep this series going!
“Must be a nice dream..”
Sayonara
"my soul is always with you"
👊😔🔫
I refuse to believe he's dead but at the same time Garden of Light is haunting me
Really hope stuff like this comes back into fashion. It is beautiful
Wonderful explanations of the library for all ofus not from NYC. Thank you!
When I was little more than the equivalent of a newly printed booklet, my father took me to the Reading Room and showed me how to use the walled index cards..
It was a rite of passage, a baptism and an initiation into a world I have called home ever since.
Absolutely incredible video - saved to my favorites to watch again! Thank you so much for making and posting this !!!
There´s no more to say but thanks for taking us through the massivness of this notable building in Midtown. Content that matters, keep doing this guys..
Just casually taking notes. Totally inspired me to make a library dungeons and dragons map for a potential encounter
Please produce more of these pieces on public spaces! So many historic NYC buildings I would love to learn about!
Now this is how to build a public building, not that horrible modern glass and concrete. Great video.
This episode is for a respect. Couldn’t be better. Hope you’ll show as more similar episodes in a future.
Fantastic video of a beautiful space. I'd love to watch more videos like this.
This channel is the best on RUclips. Period!
WOAH. this was just magical ♥ you guys are doing things right.
hopefully one day I could visit and fall in love with the building once more!
I live in L.A and just by looking at these vids, New York is the type of city that is quite enjoyable and fabulous to live and explore if and only if you have the time and more importantly the money.
everything about this library is so beautiful why don't they make buildings like this anymore??
because minimalism is so much more beautiful. decorative ceilings with carvings and paintings? how about just a white concrete ceiling with cables. really puts the mind at ease
In 1964 I worked for the NYPL, Soundview Branch. I’ve been to the main library a couple of times. I found it gorgeous but overwhelming. When my mother was a girl, about 1925, she used to skip school. The school administrators said she went to 14th street and was picking up sailors. Actually she was at the NYPL, reading.
The best tour! Pls make more of this kind of video.
I really enjoyed this tour of the New York City Library...I would love to see it in person but this is the next best thing! Thank you 📚❤️
Wow, only 9 years to build all of that! There is a structure being built in my city that has been under construction for over 3 years now and so far all they have done is dug a foundation hole and erected an the place where the elevators and stairs are. They really got stuff done in the old days.
The Empire State Building was completed in 13 months.
That's not just a building, it's a soul. Wow 😳 Mesmerizing.
12:40 this is where the library fight scene happens in John Wick: Parabellum, they fall to the ground floor and finish it there.
I don't mean to be that guy but at 18:22 in the Periodical Room the commentator calls the seal on the table "the seal of the State of New York" when it's actually the seal of the City of New York. Just a heads up on an otherwise an amazing vid. Been there several times and now I can appreciate it even more!
This was great. Thank you for this. It would be great to do one on the Library of Congress in Washington, DC, America's library.
I used to work on 44th and 5th ave and spent my lunch hour sittin' on the steps of this branch back in the late 1970's/ early 80's. A freakin' awesome building. Not too shabby inside either. Fuhgeddaboudit!