Fisher Fine Arts Library
Fisher Fine Arts Library at the University of Pennsylvania is a masterwork of Victorian architecture designed by Frank Furness and completed in 1891. Originally built as the University Library, the building's massive red brick and terra cotta facades, distinctive tower, and spectacular reading room represent Furness's mature achievement and demonstrate how functional requirements can generate architectural expression. The building has been called an early example of functionalist architecture for its honest expression of structure and mechanical systems. Now housing Penn's fine arts collections, Fisher Fine Arts Library continues serving scholarly purposes in spaces that inspire as well as accommodate.[1]
History
The library was constructed between 1888 and 1891 to serve as the University of Pennsylvania's main library facility, addressing the institution's growing need for dedicated library space. Frank Furness received the commission and created a building that would become one of his most celebrated works. The structure served as the university's central library for decades before transitioning to its current specialized role as the fine arts library, housing collections in art history, architecture, city planning, and historic preservation.[2]
The building's significance was formally recognized through its designation as a National Historic Landmark, acknowledging both its architectural merit and its importance to the development of American library design. Throughout its history, the library has undergone various updates and renovations to accommodate changing technologies and user needs while maintaining the integrity of Furness's original design vision.[1]
Design
Furness designed the library to meet practical requirements—book storage, reader accommodation, natural lighting, and ventilation—while creating architecture of distinctive character. The building's asymmetrical composition groups different functions in visible volumes: the great reading room, the bookstack tower, the entrance hall, and subsidiary spaces each receive appropriate architectural treatment. The tower, rising prominently above the campus, serves as ventilator for the bookstacks, its height creating the stack effect that draws air through the collections. This expression of mechanical function through architectural form anticipates twentieth-century approaches to honest building design.[2]
The facades display Furness's characteristic vocabulary: bold massing, aggressive ornament, and polychrome materials that create richly textured surfaces. Red brick predominates, with terra cotta, brownstone, and iron providing contrast and accent. Windows vary in size and shape according to interior requirements, their placement following function rather than formal symmetry. The entrance, marked by oversized arch and dense ornament, creates appropriate threshold between campus and scholarly interior. Furness's approach challenged the classical revival conventions dominant in late nineteenth-century American architecture, instead embracing a more expressive Victorian sensibility that prioritized functional clarity over stylistic conformity.[1]
Reading Room
The reading room constitutes the building's most impressive space, its exposed iron structure, brick walls, and overhead lighting creating an atmosphere of serious study. The room's height and scale evoke great libraries of earlier centuries while expressing contemporary construction honestly. Iron columns and trusses remain visible rather than concealed behind applied finishes, demonstrating structural systems while supporting the room's practical functions. Natural light enters through clerestory windows and skylights, supplemented by fixtures that provide illumination for evening study.[2]
The reading room's design reflects Furness's belief that architecture should serve and inspire simultaneously. Students working in the space experience both practical accommodation and architectural quality that elevates scholarly activity. The room's materials—brick, iron, wood—require minimal maintenance while aging gracefully, their surfaces acquiring character that new construction cannot replicate. The space continues serving scholarly purposes over a century after completion, its design proving both durable and adaptable. The reading room has remained a center of academic life at Penn, providing students and scholars with a distinctive environment that distinguishes it from conventional library facilities.[1]
Historical Significance
The Fisher Fine Arts Library has been recognized as nationally significant for its architecture and its place in library design history. The building's expression of function through form—its ventilation tower, its separated bookstacks and reading room, its honest structural expression—anticipated developments that other architects would pursue decades later. Louis Sullivan, who briefly worked in Furness's office, may have absorbed lessons that informed his own influential work. The building's influence extends through the architects who studied it and adapted its principles.[2]
The building's designation as a National Historic Landmark recognizes both its architectural quality and its importance to American architectural development. Restoration projects have maintained the building's character while updating systems for contemporary use. The combination of historical significance and continued function demonstrates that landmark buildings can serve practical purposes while preserving irreplaceable architectural heritage.[1]
Current Use and Renovation
The building now houses Penn's fine arts library, with collections in art history, architecture, city planning, and historic preservation serving students and scholars. The reading room provides study space whose architectural quality distinguishes it from generic library facilities. The building's location within Penn's campus makes it accessible to the university community while its architectural distinction attracts visitors interested in Furness's work.[2]
A comprehensive $17.8 million renovation project is currently underway, scheduled for completion by winter 2026. This ambitious restoration aims to return the library to its original architectural glory while incorporating necessary modern systems and accessibility improvements. The project addresses deferred maintenance issues and upgrades building systems to meet contemporary standards for climate control, fire safety, and preservation of rare materials. Throughout the renovation process, care is being taken to preserve the building's historic character and distinctive architectural features, including the iconic reading room and its exposed structural elements.Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag
Earlier renovation and expansion projects have adapted the building for contemporary library needs—electronic resources, climate control, accessibility—while preserving its essential character. The building demonstrates that historic libraries can serve twenty-first-century scholarly requirements without sacrificing the qualities that make them architecturally significant. Fisher Fine Arts Library continues the scholarly purposes for which it was built, in spaces that honor those purposes through architectural excellence. The ongoing renovation represents the university's commitment to maintaining this landmark building as a functioning academic facility that serves current needs while protecting its irreplaceable architectural heritage for future generations.[1]