Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
University of Toronto Scarborough Library
Campus library of the University of Toronto Scarborough From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The University of Toronto Scarborough Library (or UTSC Library), part of the University of Toronto Libraries system, is the main campus library of the University of Toronto Scarborough in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Located on the ground floor of the Academic Resource Centre (ARC), it is the largest and primary library on the campus, with a collection of over 400,000 volumes in print, journals, audio, and film.
Remove ads
History
The Scarborough campus was originally opened as Scarborough College in 1964, and originally did not have its own library. It originally used a small space in the Science Wing to store its collection at a time when the college had a total student enrolment of around 200.[2] The college grew out of the space, and students raised $400,000 for the construction of a proper library in 1978. This led to the opening of the Vincent W. Bladen Library in 1982. However, as the campus continued to expand more space was needed, and the current UTSC Library was established in the Academic Resource Centre, designed by RDH Architects, in 2003.[3][4]
Remove ads
Collections
The library holds a collection of over 400,000 print, journal, audio and video volumes. Its archives and special collections include rare materials for teaching and research at the University of Toronto, materials documenting the history of the Scarborough campus and also the Scarborough community, among other historical materials.[5]
Facilities

The UTSC Library contains an open stacks section, quiet study zones, group study rooms, individual carrels across two floors, and over 200 computer stations.[1]
The BRIDGE

The UTSC Library and Department of Management jointly operate The BRIDGE, a hub for business research on the Scarborough campus. It hosts a business research library, data lab, and lounge, and is located on the ground floor of the campus's Instructional Centre.[6]
See also
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads

