Viewing history through automation
The new building housing Israel’s ‘source of knowledge’, as the library is reverently known, is located on the Givat Ram campus at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and was designed by well-known Swiss architects, Herzog & de Meuron. As the books are transported quickly to the collection point, visitors are visually engaged in the automated process through a large panoramic window, which is another eye-catching architectural feature of this spiral-shaped library. They can also follow in real time how an ancient volume finds its way to the order point, thanks to high tech. “There are currently two approaches relative to automated systems in libraries: They either prominently display their system proudly like in Jerusalem, or the system is hidden from a library’s patrons like the underground configuration at the University of Chicago, where the books requested appear through the floor as if by magic,” explains Todd Hunter, a senior account manager for automated library systems at Dematic.
For over 25 years, Dematic has been installing partially and fully automated systems in libraries and archives around the world, which generally store almost the entire collection intelligently, efficiently and on a small footprint. “Both software and hardware have evolved tremendously over the past few years and are key factors in providing reliable solutions that can be adapted to individual local conditions,” Hunter adds. This is where Dematic comes into play with its scalable systems that can hold vast numbers of books and are intelligently controlled and automated via software. The numbers involved are truly astounding: Currently, a total of more than ten million individual editions of books, magazines and articles can be stored in an average of one-seventh of the space required by conventional library archive systems. And yet, it takes no more than five minutes from the final click in the online request via the library’s lending system until the selected books are ready at the collection point.