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Posted on 1/27/26 at 12:55 pm to Joshjrn
quote:
quote:
Hill Memorial Library
Very underrated spot on campus that frequently has interesting exhibits and an excellent reserve catalog.
It was dumb that Middleton wouldn't just add on to the rear of that (which has a pretty similar footprint space-wise to what he built instead), keeping the classic facade and upstairs reading room of that building and the layout of the Quad forever intact.
Posted on 1/27/26 at 12:57 pm to Shexter
quote:
Middleton Library
Not my great grandfather’s best design work.
Posted on 1/27/26 at 1:04 pm to Shexter
The old library isn’t going anywhere for a long time.
It’s going to be costly to demo and rehab the space. That building will likely house overflow space for displaced departments as new buildings go up.
It took like 10 years to demo Kirby smith after it was “obsolete”
It’s going to be costly to demo and rehab the space. That building will likely house overflow space for displaced departments as new buildings go up.
It took like 10 years to demo Kirby smith after it was “obsolete”
Posted on 1/27/26 at 1:05 pm to Shexter
Man that's a shitty location for the new library. Middleton was perfect locale
Posted on 1/27/26 at 1:12 pm to Shexter
Will the new library have regular maintenance performed on it so that it doesn't fall into the same horrible condition as Middleton? Because otherwise, what's the point? Why construct a new building if repairs and maintenance don't improve?
This is not an argument to keep Middleton, as it has BEEN antiquated for decades. But without regular maintenance, and making repairs in a timely manner, before small problems become big catastrophes, we're only repeating history.
This is not an argument to keep Middleton, as it has BEEN antiquated for decades. But without regular maintenance, and making repairs in a timely manner, before small problems become big catastrophes, we're only repeating history.
Posted on 1/27/26 at 1:22 pm to VanRIch
quote:
what kind of resources are available in a modern day college library that cannot be accessed with a computer?
I read that there are over 5 million books in Middleton that will be moved to the new library, including many rare books.
You gonna stand over the copier and scan all those books, baw?
Posted on 1/27/26 at 1:28 pm to Shexter
quote:
![]()
VS.
quote:
The rendering does not reflect reality.
Posted on 1/27/26 at 1:30 pm to TigerMan327
quote:
Man that's a shitty location for the new library. Middleton was perfect locale
It's basically at the opposite end of the Quad. The campus seems to be migrating that direction in recent years. I guess they're getting away from the Highland crime end.
Posted on 1/27/26 at 1:43 pm to Shexter
In the 70's the coolest picks had red, green and black handles.
Blood, Land, People.
Blood, Land, People.
Posted on 1/27/26 at 1:43 pm to Shexter
New library location will be huge for engineering and business students. Walking from PFT to Middleton was a massive PITA
The new location is mostly for this reason. LSU is generating a lot of buzz building up its engineering and business programs. Things that actually benefit students in their careers
The new location is mostly for this reason. LSU is generating a lot of buzz building up its engineering and business programs. Things that actually benefit students in their careers
This post was edited on 1/27/26 at 1:46 pm
Posted on 1/27/26 at 1:48 pm to Cosmo
quote:
Are we still allowed to call them eskimos?
Inuit Americans
Posted on 1/27/26 at 2:01 pm to Shexter
My fondest memory of Middleton is never going there voluntarily. One class I had required a singular visit. Place was an absolute dump. And that was 35+ years ago. Good riddance.
Posted on 1/27/26 at 2:06 pm to Joshjrn
quote:
From the architecture to the location, Middleton was a giant fricking mistake that never should have happened.
Also wild how it just stamped out the Christian symbolism of the original area.
eta- a little help from Gemini-
before
after

This post was edited on 1/27/26 at 2:13 pm
Posted on 1/27/26 at 2:10 pm to Roberteaux
quote:
Seriously...I don't think I can spot a single white male in that rendering.
Which is ironic because white males are the ones who gave the funds to build it
Posted on 1/27/26 at 2:25 pm to lsudave1
quote:
Also the weird arse smell of Middleton
Posted on 1/27/26 at 2:35 pm to Kingpenm3
quote:
Also wild how it just stamped out the Christian symbolism of the original area.
I could be wrong, but to my recollection, that shape of open space was fairly traditional for aesthetic and practical reasons, and that there wasn't any religious intentionality behind it. But I stand to be corrected if something out there exists. I've just never been able to find anything, and I attempted to look into it a fair bit when I first learned about the original shape years ago.
Posted on 1/27/26 at 2:39 pm to Joshjrn
I’m pretty sure they intentionally planned it to be shaped like a cross I learned that in a tour of the old Hill Memorial library once back in the day. By the way, if you’ve never been in Hill Memorial library you’ve got to check it out. It’s an amazing building inside. One of the most impressive buildings on campus and most people don’t even know it exists.
Posted on 1/27/26 at 2:42 pm to T1gerNate
quote:
I’m pretty sure they intentionally planned it to be shaped like a cross I learned that in a tour of the old Hill Memorial library once back in the day.
I agree that it was intentionally designed to be a cross. I could just never find anything that indicated that it was designed to be a Cross.
And I definitely have. Actually mentioned it earlier in the thread
Posted on 1/27/26 at 3:11 pm to Kingpenm3
quote:
Also wild how it just stamped out the Christian symbolism of the original area.
Article from 2021 https://lsureveille.com/207880/news/hill-memorial-looks-to-revitalize-its-presence-on-campus-under-renovation-to-make-it-more-accessible-to-students/
quote:
Hill Memorial is one of the four original buildings on LSU’s campus, according to Associate Dean, Technology and Special Collections of LSU Libraries Gina Costello. Costello said Hill Memorial’s renovation aims to return to what the library used to be prior to 1958, before the main library opened.
Costello said the renovations should be complete by late August and she hopes it can be a well-known building on campus to study, read and learn about the history of the university and Louisiana. She said she wants Hill Memorial to have a “Hogwarts” like look with beautiful interiors that overlook campus. She also said she intends to have Hill Memorial Library be one of the most “Instagrammable” buildings on campus.
“We don’t have a place like this on campus,” Costello said.
Along with Hill Memorial, the other three original buildings are Memorial Tower, Foster Hall and Atkinson Hall. Costello said in the original design of campus, these four buildings made a cross before the rest of the Quad was constructed. The main library opened in 1958 and was named after Troy Middleton in 1978.
Processing Archivist Nick Skaggs said Hill Memorial Library is distinct from the main library because it holds some of the rarest pieces of writing in the state. Hill Memorial has original manuscripts, rare books and other historical documents that can’t be found at the main library.
He said Hill Memorial holds four “stacks”: University Archives, Louisiana and Lower Mississippi Valley Collections (LLMVC), Rare Books and the E.A. McIlhenny Natural History Collection. He said Hill Memorial also has a complete run of the Gumbo yearbooks and physical issues of The Reveille, LSU’s campus newspaper.
“These are one of a kind, you’re not going to see them anywhere else,” Skaggs said.
Skaggs highlighted that some of the rarest documents Hill Memorial holds are the Audubon Elephant Folio, which includes John James Audubon’s “Birds of America,” the Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette Cash Journal, a ledger of Queen Marie Antoinette of France’s accounts up to her death and the 1st. U.S. Regiment Corps D’Afrique muster roll, Louisiana’s first corps of African American troops for the Union.
On the second floor of Hill Memorial is a room that is currently known as the “General Reading Room.” This room was a part of the Link Drawings, the original blueprint of the building by architect Theodore Link. Costello said the Reading Room will possibly be converted into a study space after renovation. Right now it holds many of the special collections historians use for research.
“Within the next couple years, they [students] will see more spaces in Hill to utilize,” Costello said.
Costello also said everything in the library is funded by donors, not state money. She said they are looking for a primary donor for the renovation project, with a naming opportunity after the donor in place of the “General Reading Room.”
Costello said the architecture for the renovation takes its inspiration from libraries at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill and Duke University, specifically the Rubenstein Arts Center at Duke. She said she hopes the Hill Memorial will be one of the best libraries in the SEC.
The renovation of Hill Memorial is all a part of LSU’s Master Plan to completely change campus to center around Nicholson Drive.
“In the master plan, many “purists” want to return to the original campus design,” Costello said.
The old Middleton library will eventually be torn down to bring back the cross on the Quad from the original campus design. Costello said Hill Memorial will then have a beautiful view of Memorial Tower out its front windows. Another library will be built southeast of Tiger Stadium at the intersection of West Campus Drive and South Stadium Drive.
Costello said Hill Memorial will host an open house for the building to become more known across LSU’s campus. Visitors will be able to visit the new facilities and look at the vast special collections Hill Memorial holds, some being quite controversial in today’s society.
“Our job is to preserve history, not to tell people how to feel,” Costello said.
Costello also said she wants students to give feedback to Hill Memorial on how to utilize the new spaces. She said she’s open to any suggestions for Hill Memorial’s awareness among students and ways for students to appreciate the building and the history of LSU. Hill Memorial also plans to refocus special collections to encompass records of the entire campus, not just documents historians and administration can use.
Hill Memorial Library is currently open to the public, despite ongoing renovation. Hill Memorial is open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
This post was edited on 1/27/26 at 3:13 pm
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