The Raised Faculty Building at the University of Cambridge's Sidgwick Site offers a glimpse of a modern campus that never was.
Named after Sir Banister Fletcher, the library of the Royal Institute of British Architects is among the world's largest dedicated to architecture.
Plagued by environmental issues and a controversial name, the library of the Cambridge history faculty is indissociable from the evolution of Modernism in the UK.
The reorganization of the London boroughs robbed this library of its ambition as a cultural centre but gifted inhabitants of the nearby housing estates with a spacious library.
A former print shop in Clerkenwell is now used as the archives of the Corporation of London.
The many decades separating first designs with the finished British Library allowed for a marvellous change in circumstances at the heart of the project.
The SOAS library in central London is a remarkable example of post-war British library design.