In the middle of Manchester, with the bustle of the buses and the quick movement of consumers, Manchester Central Library stands like a separate area in time, disconnected from the outer world.
As soon as you walk through the antique round doors the beat changes dramatically; the hard sounds vanish, replaced by the rustling of pages, old volumes, and the smell of paper containing decades of information.
Students, scholars, visitors, all sit in silence under the great mediaeval dome, as if by tacit agreement all have decided to respect this spot which allows minds to breathe away from the chaos of everyday life.This library is nothing like the stiff old institutions, it is like a little city uniting cultures and generations under one roof. In one corner an African student is reviewing university research, opposite him an older woman reads an old English classic, and adjacent youngsters are painting and group reading.
This human variety lends the room a particular warmth, making the library more than a centre for books, a location for silent human contact where dreams, ambitions and personal experiences come together without many words.Manchester Central Library’s beauty is in maintaining the value of “quietness” in the age of digital speed. In an age of electronics, these halls offer visitors a rare sensation of focus and serenity. Enjoying the light rain kissing the city streets from the side of the large windows, it becomes clear that some places are not measured by their size or fame, but by the strong emotional effect they have on people and their ability to remind humanity that knowledge can still bring people together around something greater than the noise of daily life.