One of the first independent commissions of the prominent Beaux-Arts firm of York and Sawyer, Starr Library was modeled on small libraries then being designed by their parent firm, McKim, Mead and White. The selection of their design over a competing Romanesque Revival alternative marks the college's commitment to classical and City Beautiful principles that would dominate campus development for the next half century. Along with a change in material from local limestone to more formal Vermont marble, the choice of this fashionable aesthetic embodies the college's determination to reposition itself from a regional to a national institution. Shepley, Bulfinch, Richardson and Abbott modernized the library's classicism with their International Style reading room addition in 1959–1962. It was superseded as the college library in 2004 (AD30.4) and adapted for academic uses by Childs, Bertman, Tseckares of Boston with the restoration of its historic spaces and the addition of a rear winter garden, joining office wings scaled to Old Stone Row.
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Axinn Center at Starr Library
1898–1900, 1927, York and Sawyer; 2005–2008 addition, Childs, Bertman, Tseckares South end of front campus
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