Manchester Central Library

Creative Tourist
Manchester Central Library
Photograph by Mike Peel (www.mikepeel.net). [CC BY-SA 4.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Manchester’s Central Library is up there with the city’s most stunning buildings. Its neo-Classical curves, designed by E. Vincent Harris, were inspired by the Pantheon in Rome, inspiring one critic, after the library’s opening in 1934, to write: “This is the sort of thing which persuades one to believe in the perennial applicability of the Classical canon”.

Between 2010 and 2014 the library’s rotunda domed structure was refreshed, while its inner beauty was revealed with a sympathetic, yet entirely 21st century, refurbishment.

From Art Deco lamps, brass handrails, wooden carvings and the Shakespeare window above the entrance, to the intricate gilded clock and Scagiola columns (they’re hollow; give them a gentle knock) in the amazing domed Whispering Gallery of the first-floor Reading Room – the interior is as glorious as the exterior. A 1930s staircase was revealed in the refurbishment; original ceilings and floors saw the light of day for the first time in years; the “heritage stacks” became visible behind glazing – this revamp thoughtfully juxtaposed old with new.

The library’s treasures include 1846 playbills from Theatre Royal over the road, a hand-written Roman codex unearthed locally and an Elizabeth Gaskell first edition.

Alongside the old there is an impressive Archives+ area on the ground floor, alongside interactive display units and touch tables in the open plan café. Here too, you can watch films in the BFI Mediatheque and North West Film Archive pods. “It’s all about stories,” says Head of Libraries, Neil MacInnes.

The lending library has 110,000 items, a media centre, a unique black history collection (at the Ahmed Iqbal Ullah Race Relations Resource Centre), a Secret Garden-themed children’s section and as well as hosting the largest public music library in the country. There’s also an exhibition and performance space, soft seating and 170 computers for public use spread throughout the building. “It’s the city’s study, but it’s also the city’s living room” says MacInnes.

St Peter's SquareManchesterM2 5PD View map
Telephone: 0161 234 1983 Visit Now

Accessibility

Fully accessible

Admission Charges

Free

Children and Families

Children's library, highchairs in cafe, baby changing on site

Commercial and Hire Services

Meeting & performance rooms for hire

Services and Facilities

Lending library, archive centre, BFI Mediatheque, cafe, children's library, music library, live music, live theatre, events

Opening Hours

  • Monday9:30am - 4:30pm
  • Tuesday9:30am - 4:30pm
  • Wednesday9:30am - 4:30pm
  • Thursday9:30am - 6:00pm
  • Friday9:30am - 4:30pm
  • Saturday9:30am - 4:30pm

Always double check opening hours with the venue before making a special visit.

A white, middle aged man with short brown hair and wearing a light blue shirt, sits at a round table by a window and against a white wall. He has his arms crossed on the table.
LiteratureManchester
David Nicholls at Central Library

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from £10.00

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A white, middle aged man with short brown hair and wearing a light blue shirt, sits at a round table by a window and against a white wall. He has his arms crossed on the table.
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