National Library of El Salvador


The National Library of El Salvador is a national library located in San Salvador, the capital city of El Salvador. The library was opened in November 2023 and stands on the former site of the. It was built with the cooperation of the People’s Republic of China.

History

In December 2019, Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele announced the construction of a new national library, known as simply the National Library of El Salvador, in San Salvador following an international trip to China where Bukele met with Xi Jinping, the leader of China. The library's construction was projected to cost at least US$54 million and would be built with Chinese cooperation. On 4 October 2021, the Salvadoran government began demolition of the, which the new national library would replace. The Francisco Gavidia National Library was originally built in 1870 during the presidency of Francisco Dueñas.
Construction on the National Library of El Salvador began on 3 February 2022. On February 20, 2024, the under the direction of Cultural Promotion, Sport, and Cuisine, received 83 books as a donation from the Moroccan Embassy accredited in El Salvador. The books spanned genres such as tourism, world cultures, and children’s literature in French, English and Spanish. They were delivered to the director of the Cultural Promotion, Sport and Cuisine under the Vice Ministry of Diaspora and Human Mobility, Jessica Aguilar. According to the Vice Ministry, allied countries made the first delivery of approximately 4,900 books to accompany this donation.
The library was opened on 14 November 2023 and Bukele posted a filmed tour of the library on his Twitter account; on the tour, he was accompanied by his brother and presidential advisor, Karim Bukele, and the vice minister of culture, Eric Doradeo. The tour displayed the library's facilities.

Library Services

The National Library of El Salvador is open 24/7, being the first national library in the world to offer such hours. With seven floors in the building, library services include:
On the opening date, the former Francisco Gavidia National Library's original collections remain inaccessible to the public. The BINAES also has trilingual signage in Spanish, Náhuatl and English.