The Perry-Castaņeda Library is named for two former University professors, Ervin S. Perry and Carlos E. Castaņeda. Professor Perry was the first African American to be appointed to the academic rank of professor, and Professor Castaņeda played a central role in the early development of the Benson Latin American Collection. In an effort to recognize the contributions of these distinguished faculty members and to express the University's lasting commitment to educational opportunities for all Texans, President Lorene L. Rogers recommended to the UT System Board of Regents that the new facility be named the Perry-Castaņeda Library. By unanimous vote the Board of Regents adopted this proposal at their meeting of September 12, 1975. The Perry-Castaņeda Library is one of the largest academic library buildings in North America and is a major research center in Texas. Three years under construction, the six-level, open-stack facility was designed to serve as the main library of UT Austin.Building History
The UT System Board of Regents authorized planning and funding for the new
Perry-Castaneda Library (PCL) facility in 1972. A construction contract was awarded
in early 1974 to Stokes Construction Company. Architects were Phelps, Simmons
and Garza and Associates, and Bartlett Cocke and Associates, Inc.
PCL is situated at the corner of Speedway and 21st Street. The exterior of the building is
Indiana limestone; interior walls are Texas fossiliferous limestone. PCL,
an open-stack facility, embraces all subject fields, with strongest holdings
in the humanities, social sciences, business, and education. Service and staff
areas are concentrated on the first two of the six building levels, with bookstacks
and general reading areas located on Levels 3 through 6.How did PCL get its name?
Size:
500,673 square feet, gross area
413,168 square feet, net assignable area
6 levels
9.3 acres of carpet
70 miles of book stacks
(74 miles from Austin to San Antonio)
Cost:
$21,700,000 including landscaping, furniture, and furnishings
($64,583,333.33 in 2002 dollars)
Capacity:
3,200,000 volumes
(2,500,000 volumes in 2002)
Building History
Then and Now
UTLOL