Belgrade City Library
Belgrade City Library is a public library in Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. It is a parent library for more than a dozen municipal libraries and their branches. It is also the largest lending library in Serbia. It is located in the center of the city, in the pedestrian zone of Knez Mihailova Street, next to the shopping mall.
Belgrade City Library was founded in 1931. In 1989, the majority of municipal libraries in the territory of the City of Belgrade decided to unite and form a single network of libraries. Presently, Belgrade City Library comprises 13 municipal libraries operating in the territory of the City of Belgrade. Headquarters are located at 56 Knez Mihailova Street, in an edifice known as Serbian Crown, a cultural monument that was given the status of immovable cultural property in 1981.
The overall size of Belgrade City Library holdings exceeds 1,500,000 items. Library operates approximately 70 facilities, covering an area of 13,000 square meters, and has more than 140,000 users. It is a partner in the most important European cultural projects.
Organisational structure
Belgrade City Library is divided into these organisational units:- Belgrade City Library;
- Thirteen libraries in urban municipalities and their branch libraries.
Special Collections Department
Children's Department
Children's Department has been in existence since the foundation of Belgrade City Library in 1931. Today, there is one operational children's department, namely "Čika Jova Zmaj", with holdings comprising around 30,000 items. The department enrolled approximately 3,000 users last year. Neven Children's Department is expected to reopen in the near future, although that is not known for certain.The Department has been implementing a variety of programmes and actively working with children. "Secret" was the title of a project run by "Čika Jova Zmaj" Children's Department that was awarded first prize at the 2009 Biblionet as the best library project in Serbia 2006–2009. Another project, "Book is a Picture Gallery", was presented at the 75th IFLA Congress in Milan as a poster session.
In addition, two municipal libraries have their own special children's departments and implement a variety of programmes.
Municipal libraries in the Belgrade City Library network
- "Jovan Dučić" Library, Barajevo
- "Dositej Obradović" Library, Voždovac
- "Petar Kočić" Library, Vračar
- "Ilija Garašanin" Library, Grocka
- "Vuk Karadžić" Library, Zvezdara
- "Sveti Sava" Library, Zemun
- "Despot Stefan Lazarevic" Library, Mladenovac
- "Vuk Karadžić" Library, New Belgrade
- "Miodrag Bulatović" Library, Rakovica
- "Isidora Sekulić" Library, Savski Venac
- "Milovan Vidaković" Library, Sopot
- "Đorđe Jovanović" Library, Stari Grad
- "Laza Kostić" Library, Čukarica
History
On January 11, 1931, when the library opened its doors, Belgrade got a modern urban library. Following the example of other European libraries of the day, books were classified and arranged according to the principles of the Universal Decimal Classification and training courses for librarians were run for the first time. In the same year, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia saw the opening of its first Children's Reading Room. The library was open to the general public and anybody could use its resources. Books could be borrowed with an ID card and were lent out free of charge. Library cards for children were embellished with an illustration by Beta Vukanović and were inscribed with an excerpt from the 1924 Geneva Declaration of the Rights of the Child.
The 1941 German Bombing of Belgrade caused untold damage to the library, reducing the building to rubble and destroying invaluable cultural heritage. As a result of Nazi firebomb raids, the roof of the building that used to house the library at the time was destroyed by the flames, along with its last floor. The Children's Library was in operation throughout the war and library services became available to other users as well in early 1943. After World War II, the library started regular operation on January 18, 1945. Library holdings increased from 20,000 units at the end of the war to 39,813 in 1948.
Until 1953, the Belgrade City Library did not have a complex internal structure. Then, divisions were set up in 1954 and the Library Centre was established in 1955. The goal was to create a single network of public libraries across municipalities. Under the provisions of the Libraries Act, the Belgrade City Library has been designated parent library for libraries operating in the territory of the City of Belgrade since 1961. In October 1986, Library moved into new premises, the building of the former Serbian Crown Hotel located at 56 Knez Mihailova Street, where it is still situated. Serbian poet Desanka Maksimović opened the new building of Belgrade City Library at an official ceremony. The Belgrade City Library was the first public lending library in which cataloguing was computerized in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
Following a referendum held on 9 January 1989, employees of 12 out of 16 municipal libraries voted in favor of integration, turning Belgrade City Library into a single network of libraries.
Headquarters
Belgrade City Library headquarters are located in a building that used to be a hotel called Serbian Crown, a cultural monument granted the status of immovable cultural property in 1981. On the premises of headquarters, there are, in addition to the circulation desk, two reading rooms, the book storage and administrative premises, the Roman Hall, Atrium Gallery, Vuk's Hall and the Art Department's Reading Room.Serbian Crown building
The building in which Belgrade City Library is presently situated was once Serbian Crown Hotel built around 1867 as the most modern, emblematic and best-furnished hotel in Belgrade at the time. In the history of Belgrade's architecture, the building of Serbian Crown Hotel marked the beginning of a vigorous process of Europeanisation of the city in the latter half of the 19th century. The architecture of the building is typical of the eclecticism of the late 1800s, incorporating a mixture of the Renaissance and other previous historical styles. It is not known who was the architect who designed the building. In 1986, the edifice was remodelled to accommodate Belgrade City Library. The building has preserved its original appearance to this day. In the same year building was reconstructed for the purposes of Belgrade City Library and has maintained its original appearance.Roman Hall
The Roman Hall is a unique venue with an in situ archaeological site and a lapidarium displaying exhibits such as statues, altars, stelae and other 2nd to 4th-century AD stone sculptures and ceramics originating from the Singidunum area and the Danube Basin in the Roman province of Upper Moesia.During the 1983-1986 renovation of the building, remains of an even older structure were discovered due to the lowering of the level of the basement floor. Archaeologists found that the remains were actually parts of ramparts foundation and a main gate tower of a Roman fort located in the Upper Town of Belgrade Fortress. As a result of that important discovery, modifications had been made to the design and the Library got the Roman Hall intended for staging public events instead of a book depository.