The central branch of the city's library system is an architectural and intellectual monument. The original 1895 building, a National Historic Landmark designed by Charles F. McKim, is an Italian Renaissance-style masterpiece that fairly drips with art. The lobby doors are the work of Daniel Chester French (who also designed the Abraham Lincoln statue in the memorial in Washington, the Minute Man statue in Concord, and the John Harvard statue in Cambridge). The recently restored murals are by John Singer Sargent and Pierre Puvis de Chavannes, among others. Visit the lovely courtyard or peek at it from a window on the stairs. The adjoining addition, of the same height and material (pink granite), was designed by Philip Johnson and opened in 1972. The lobby holds changing exhibits.
Free Art & Architecture Tours (www.bpl.org/guides/tours.htm) begin year-round Monday at 2:30pm, Tuesday and Thursday at 6pm, Friday and Saturday at 11am, and September through May on Sunday at 2pm. Call tel. 617/536-5400, ext. 216, to arrange group tours.
700 Boylston St.Phone: 617/536-5400.Open: Mon-Thurs 9am-9pm; Fri-Sat 9am-5pm; Sun (Oct-May only) 1-5pm.Free admission.Closed Sun June-Sept and legal holidays.T: Green Line to Copley.