| American Library Association. General Meeting - Library science - 1892 - 172 pages
...may differ as to probabilities of growth, conditions of equipment, and opportunities for usefulness. The interior arrangement ought to be planned before the exterior is considered. Within such necessary limitations as the size and shape of the lot and the amount of money available,... | |
| Mary Wright Plummer - Library science - 1894 - 68 pages
...building should be planned especially for the kind of work to be done, and the community to be served. "The interior arrangement ought to be planned before the exterior is considered. " No convenience of arrangement should ever be sacrificed for mere architectural effect. ' ' The plan... | |
| Libraries - 1896 - 368 pages
...building should be planned specially for the kind of work to be done, and the community to be served. The interior arrangement ought to be planned before the exterior is considered. No convenience of arrangement should be sacrificed for mere architectural effect. The plan should be... | |
| John Cotton Dana - Library science - 1899 - 204 pages
...building should be planned especially for the kind of work to be done, and the community to be served. The interior arrangement ought to be planned before the exterior is considered. No convenience of arrangement should be sacrificed for mere architectural effect. The plan should be... | |
| Library legislation - 1904 - 112 pages
...building should be planned especially for the kind of work to be done, and the community to be served. The interior arrangement ought to be planned before the exterior is considered. No convenience of arrangement should be sacrificed for mere architectural effect. The plan should be... | |
| American Library Association - Library administration - 1905 - 586 pages
...architecture." The first points enforced were these: A library building should be planned for library work. The interior arrangement ought to be planned before the exterior is considered. No convenience of arrangement should ever be sacrificed for mere architectural effect. A library should... | |
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