Gelman Library
The Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library, more commonly known as Gelman Library, is the main library of George Washington University, and is located on its Foggy Bottom campus, at the corner of 22nd and H Streets. Along with the Eckles Library at the Mount Vernon College for Women and the library at the George Washington University Virginia Campus, it is one of three major libraries of George Washington University. The Himmelfarb Health Sciences Library and the Jacob Burns Law Library also serve the university. The Gelman Library is a member of the Washington Research Library Consortium and the Association of Research Libraries.
The 7-story library was built in 1973 and was renamed the Gelman Library in 1980 after a contribution from the estate of Melvin Gelman, a local real estate developer and alumnus of the university. In 2010, after his wife, Estelle Gelman, died, the library was renamed Estelle and Melvin Gelman Library.
For most of the year, parts of the library are open 24 hours per day, seven days per week for use by students, faculty, and staff.
It contains over two million volumes.
It is constructed in the Brutalist architectural style. It features a concrete façade punctuated by windows that are divided by projecting vertical slabs.
The ground level contains a Starbucks.
Notable collections
The 7th floor contains:- The National Security Archive, a research institution that publishes declassified files on foreign policy of the United States. It was a National Security Archive Freedom of Information Act request that eventually made the Central Intelligence Agency's so-called "Family Jewels" public.
- Special Collections – primary and secondary resources for researchers, as well as a large collection on Washington.
- Edward Kiev Judaica Collection – Includes the leading collection of modern Hebrew rare books, maps, and archival materials related to Judaic studies among universities in the Washington, D.C. area.
- Global Resource Center – numerous sources focusing on the 20th century to present day that analyze political, socio-economic, historical, and cultural aspects of countries and regions worldwide.