Walter Library building history

Learn about the history of Walter Library, its namesake, and its renovations. 

History

Walter Library was built in 1922/23 and first opened to the public as the University of Minnesota's main library in 1924.

Designed by architect Clarence Johnston and built at a cost of $1.4 million, the library was an ornate and classical building with its stone and brick exterior, ornamental plaster ceilings, intricate woodwork, and state-of-the-art steel book stacks. Like its neighbors on Northrop Mall, it was built in the Roman Renaissance style of red brick and Bedford limestone trim, with a colonnaded portico.

Walter Library was named in 1959 in honor of Frank Keller Walter, who was University Librarian from 1921 until his retirement in 1943.

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Renovations

The renovation of Walter Library, designed by Minneapolis architectural firm Stageberg Beyer Sachs, began in December 1999 and was completed in December 2002 at a cost of $63.4 million.

The ceilings

To return the building to its former glory, the restoration firm of Conrad Schmitt Studios of New Berlin, Wisconsin, was selected to completely repaint the decorative ceilings.

These ceilings, though they appear to be stonework or timber, are actually cast plaster. In the restoration, gold leaf was used instead of the original bronze paint that had oxidized to a green color shortly after the building opened. The necessary smoke detectors and sprinkler heads were very carefully disguised to match the design of the ceilings.

First floor lobby

The use of gold leaf is dramatic in the restoration of the first floor lobby ceiling.

The astrolabe chandelier in the center of the lobby is an original fixture, thoroughly cleaned to return it to its original beauty. In the center of the two sets of brass grills, about three feet up from the floor, are some of the owls, a motif that runs throughout the building.

At the corners of the door lintels there are owls along with turtles, a hand-held torch and an oil lamp, all ancient symbols of learning.

In the relief carvings over the exhibit cases, you can also see the footed urn and garland motif that is repeated in the cornice of the South Reading Room on the second floor. In the corridor leading to Pleasant Street, the stone panels along the walls once formed part of the floor of the original book stacks.

The Great Hall

This second floor space was originally the hub of the library, housing the card catalog and the counter where users could request books from the closed book stacks.

The counter, which stood on the west side of the room, was dismantled and pieces of it used to create the counter now on the east side.

As with the ceilings, gold leaf was used on the Corinthian caps of the green alpine marble columns. The walls are of Mankato travertine, and the relief carvings over the doors are Tennessee marble.

In the carving over the door to Room 208, the presence of the single owl figure at the lower right-hand side of the chair suggests that the figure seated in this carving may well be Athena, the goddess of learning, whose talisman was the owl.

The North Reading Room (Room 208)

Besides the careful restoration of the coffered ceiling in this room, a notable feature of the restoration is the “reappearance” of the cornice motif.

The cornice in this room, along with the one in the South Reading Room (Room 204), had been painted the same color as the walls, making most of the detail nearly invisible. The dolphin motif in the cornice is now restored to its original detail.

The large oak tables in this reading room and the East Reading Room (Room 206) are the library's original tables. They have been carefully restored, and a re-creation of the original task lights that were originally on the tables now sit on an oak pediment housing electrical power and access ports to the Internet.

All three reading rooms have floors raised 10” above the concrete to accommodate power lines and data cables.

The East Reading Room (Room 206)

The elaborate detail in the design of the ceilings is most dramatic in this room. Above the bookcases is an impressive execution of the owl motif, with carved owls ringing the entire room. All of the owls were carved with blank eyes, with the exception of one, which has pupils. A private little stonecutter’s joke?

The South Reading Room (Room 204)

Like the North Reading Room (Room 208), the South Reading Room's plaster ceiling is painted to appear as a wood-coffered ceiling.

The cornice detail is unique, picking up the footed urn and garland detail that was used in the carvings on the first floor.

In the bronze radiator covers, the narrow bands that separate the crosshatched panels appear to contain more owls, but a closer look shows that these figures are actually flowers and leaves that from a distance look like a stylized owl.

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The owls

The latest count is 225 owls throughout Walter Library, plus the stylized “owls-head” design in the Reading Room light fixtures, which would add hundreds to the count.

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More information

For more information about the history of Walter Library, consult the following sources:

Historic building photographs
Photographs of Walter Library taken across various decades, including building the library in the 1920s.
Frank Keller Walter papers
The collection of personal and professional papers of Frank Walter, Librarian of the University of Minnesota and for whom Walter Library is named after.
Stageberg Beyer Sachs Inc. records
Materials from the architectural firm who undertook renovation of the building in the late 1990s.
University of Minnesota Libraries records
The administrative materials of the Libraries, including information on Walter Library.

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