If you own a lot of books, it’s great to have a place to celebrate and enjoy them. That’s why a home library can be so appealing: It’s a welcoming retreat where you can appreciate and be inspired by volumes you’ve collected over the years.
“Libraries are inherently personal, where you’re surrounded by the things you love,” said Courtney Coleman, a founding partner of Brockschmidt & Coleman, an interior design firm with offices in New York and New Orleans. “It offers a kind of personal history, because it reflects things that have informed your life and that you’re interested in.”
Coleman and her partner, Bill Brockschmidt, routinely design home libraries for their clients that feel like special destinations, where homeowners and visitors are encouraged to spend hours turning pages.
Here’s how they and other designers create home libraries that feel like much more than storage spaces.
Find a space
Having a dedicated room for a home library is a wonderful thing, but space constraints don’t always allow for one. If you lack a spare room to turn into a library, one can be added to a space you might not have considered, such as a wide hallway, an alcove or even an unused corner in a larger room.
When Brockschmidt & Coleman designed a compact house for an author with one big living space, for instance, they created a library by wrapping the walls around the dining table with built-in bookcases.
Sean Anderson, a Memphis, Tennessee-based designer, created a library while designing an apartment in Tribeca, in New York City, by making the most of a corridor that was wide enough to accept bookcases and furniture. “It had primarily been a pass-through, but was larger than most hallways,” Anderson said. “A lot of these spaces aren’t strictly libraries; they are multifunctional spaces.”
Devise a storage plan
Take stock of your books and determine how much space you need to store and display them. Free-standing bookcases are one option, but many designers prefer built-ins that stretch wall to wall, and floor to ceiling, so the volumes almost look like wallpaper once they’re put in place.