Main Library

At the largest school library in Greece, we offer junior high and high school students all the necessary tools to do research projects and deepen their knowledge.

Athens College Library began its operation in the 1930s within the spaces of Benaki Hall.  Its collection was organized more systematically in the 1950s.  Since 1964, it is housed in its own 1300 m2 building on the Psychico campus, a structure designed by architect and Athens College alumnus, Pavlos Mylonas.

Opening Hours:  Monday-Friday 08.15-17.00, Saturday 11:00-16:00

During holidays and summer break, operating hours may change. 

 

At the Main Athens College Library, we have:

  • 100,000 Greek and foreign volumes in Greek and English
  • subscriptions to electronic databases
  • 200 current titles of printed and digital journals/magazines and newspapers
  • a rich selection of audiovisual materials
  • 200 study stations and 140 computers & laptops
  • the D-Space institutional repository in order to collect, organize, promote, and maintain materials produced at the College

 

Veroia performed yet another “miracle”

Veroia performed yet another “miracle”

“Tablets uploaded with Arabic language newspapers for refugees!  The ingenuity and speed with which the Veroia Central Public Library organizes its services never ceases to amaze us.  It infiltrates the community, listens to its needs, innovates, experiments and envisions the library of the future.  It is no coincidence that for the past fifteen years, the building, designed specifically to house a library, is the third most frequented place in the city, after home and work."

 

 

The acclaimed Central Public Library of Veroia does not rest on its laurels; instead, it moves forth with new improvements and additions.

 

“Tablets uploaded with Arabic language newspapers for refugees!  The ingenuity and speed with which the Veroia Central Public Library organizes its services never ceases to amaze us.  It infiltrates the community, listens to its needs, innovates, experiments and envisions the library of the future.  It is no coincidence that for the past fifteen years, the building, designed specifically to house a library, is the third most frequented place in the city, after home and work.

 

Recently, the Library “turned on the lights,” both literally and figuratively.  This time, the lights were turned on in a highly aesthetic, state-of-the-art, multi-function space located on its second floor.  Some of the Library’s colorful chairs bear the name of donors.  And this because the project’s completion was the result of a financing campaign known as crowdfunding.  The recipient in 2010 of the “Access to Learning Award” by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Library used every last cent of the one million dollar award. Short 100,000 euros to equip its events hall, eight hundred donors immediately responded, offering sums ranging from one to ten thousand euros.  “The public trusts us because it is satisfied that the money is well invested.  We hope that they will remain by our side.  We need them in order to continue,” explained Aspasia Tasiopoulou, Communications Manager.

Words cannot begin to describe the images, the motley crowd and the services that coexist on its multiple levels.  Among everything, an efficiently designed kitchen.  “Kitchen in a public library?” ask some. “Why not?” responds the indefatigable team that continues the work of the Library’s visionary, Giannis Trochopoulos, former Library Director and present Board member.  In a Library where the expansion of activities and visitors without discrimination (1,100 new members are added each year) is constant, there is a place for everyone and everything: the unemployed person looking for a job, readers selecting books, the immigrant filling out a form, students looking for study aids, musicians recording in the studio, housewives attending a cooking class.  And next to them, refugees [whom the Library has supported from the very beginning].    …

Impressive numbers

Even though the Library, as a strategic partner of the Future Library program (funded by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation), has for the past five years guided and mentored libraries around Greece, Veroia still maintains the primacy.  The numbers are staggering by Greek standards: 500 to 800 visitors daily, loaning more than 170,000 items annually (books, periodicals, DVDs, CD-ROMs, Kindles, board games, photographic equipment and more).  The majority of the visitors are children and women who love Modern Greek literature.  By contrast, men are fanatical readers of historical novels and Ancient Greek philosophy.

Beyond the numbers, Veroia’s phenomenon raises a question.  How has the Library influenced the community of this provincial city?   …

To learn the answer to this question and to read the testimonials of two students – one in Junior High and the other in High School – go to the full article (in Greek) by clicking on the link below.

http://www.kathimerini.gr/858674/gallery/politismos/vivlio/h-veroia-ekane-pali-to-8ayma-ths

 

Source: “Arts and Letters” insert, Kathimerini newspaper, Sunday, May 8, 2016

 

Columnist  Giota Myrsioti

 

 

 

 

Back
Veroia performed yet another “miracle”

Veroia performed yet another “miracle”

“Tablets uploaded with Arabic language newspapers for refugees!  The ingenuity and speed with which the Veroia Central Public Library organizes its services never ceases to amaze us.  It infiltrates the community, listens to its needs, innovates, experiments and envisions the library of the future.  It is no coincidence that for the past fifteen years, the building, designed specifically to house a library, is the third most frequented place in the city, after home and work."

 

 

The acclaimed Central Public Library of Veroia does not rest on its laurels; instead, it moves forth with new improvements and additions.

 

“Tablets uploaded with Arabic language newspapers for refugees!  The ingenuity and speed with which the Veroia Central Public Library organizes its services never ceases to amaze us.  It infiltrates the community, listens to its needs, innovates, experiments and envisions the library of the future.  It is no coincidence that for the past fifteen years, the building, designed specifically to house a library, is the third most frequented place in the city, after home and work.

 

Recently, the Library “turned on the lights,” both literally and figuratively.  This time, the lights were turned on in a highly aesthetic, state-of-the-art, multi-function space located on its second floor.  Some of the Library’s colorful chairs bear the name of donors.  And this because the project’s completion was the result of a financing campaign known as crowdfunding.  The recipient in 2010 of the “Access to Learning Award” by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Library used every last cent of the one million dollar award. Short 100,000 euros to equip its events hall, eight hundred donors immediately responded, offering sums ranging from one to ten thousand euros.  “The public trusts us because it is satisfied that the money is well invested.  We hope that they will remain by our side.  We need them in order to continue,” explained Aspasia Tasiopoulou, Communications Manager.

Words cannot begin to describe the images, the motley crowd and the services that coexist on its multiple levels.  Among everything, an efficiently designed kitchen.  “Kitchen in a public library?” ask some. “Why not?” responds the indefatigable team that continues the work of the Library’s visionary, Giannis Trochopoulos, former Library Director and present Board member.  In a Library where the expansion of activities and visitors without discrimination (1,100 new members are added each year) is constant, there is a place for everyone and everything: the unemployed person looking for a job, readers selecting books, the immigrant filling out a form, students looking for study aids, musicians recording in the studio, housewives attending a cooking class.  And next to them, refugees [whom the Library has supported from the very beginning].    …

Impressive numbers

Even though the Library, as a strategic partner of the Future Library program (funded by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation), has for the past five years guided and mentored libraries around Greece, Veroia still maintains the primacy.  The numbers are staggering by Greek standards: 500 to 800 visitors daily, loaning more than 170,000 items annually (books, periodicals, DVDs, CD-ROMs, Kindles, board games, photographic equipment and more).  The majority of the visitors are children and women who love Modern Greek literature.  By contrast, men are fanatical readers of historical novels and Ancient Greek philosophy.

Beyond the numbers, Veroia’s phenomenon raises a question.  How has the Library influenced the community of this provincial city?   …

To learn the answer to this question and to read the testimonials of two students – one in Junior High and the other in High School – go to the full article (in Greek) by clicking on the link below.

http://www.kathimerini.gr/858674/gallery/politismos/vivlio/h-veroia-ekane-pali-to-8ayma-ths

 

Source: “Arts and Letters” insert, Kathimerini newspaper, Sunday, May 8, 2016

 

Columnist  Giota Myrsioti

 

 

 

 

Back
Veroia performed yet another “miracle”

Veroia performed yet another “miracle”

“Tablets uploaded with Arabic language newspapers for refugees!  The ingenuity and speed with which the Veroia Central Public Library organizes its services never ceases to amaze us.  It infiltrates the community, listens to its needs, innovates, experiments and envisions the library of the future.  It is no coincidence that for the past fifteen years, the building, designed specifically to house a library, is the third most frequented place in the city, after home and work."

 

 

The acclaimed Central Public Library of Veroia does not rest on its laurels; instead, it moves forth with new improvements and additions.

 

“Tablets uploaded with Arabic language newspapers for refugees!  The ingenuity and speed with which the Veroia Central Public Library organizes its services never ceases to amaze us.  It infiltrates the community, listens to its needs, innovates, experiments and envisions the library of the future.  It is no coincidence that for the past fifteen years, the building, designed specifically to house a library, is the third most frequented place in the city, after home and work.

 

Recently, the Library “turned on the lights,” both literally and figuratively.  This time, the lights were turned on in a highly aesthetic, state-of-the-art, multi-function space located on its second floor.  Some of the Library’s colorful chairs bear the name of donors.  And this because the project’s completion was the result of a financing campaign known as crowdfunding.  The recipient in 2010 of the “Access to Learning Award” by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Library used every last cent of the one million dollar award. Short 100,000 euros to equip its events hall, eight hundred donors immediately responded, offering sums ranging from one to ten thousand euros.  “The public trusts us because it is satisfied that the money is well invested.  We hope that they will remain by our side.  We need them in order to continue,” explained Aspasia Tasiopoulou, Communications Manager.

Words cannot begin to describe the images, the motley crowd and the services that coexist on its multiple levels.  Among everything, an efficiently designed kitchen.  “Kitchen in a public library?” ask some. “Why not?” responds the indefatigable team that continues the work of the Library’s visionary, Giannis Trochopoulos, former Library Director and present Board member.  In a Library where the expansion of activities and visitors without discrimination (1,100 new members are added each year) is constant, there is a place for everyone and everything: the unemployed person looking for a job, readers selecting books, the immigrant filling out a form, students looking for study aids, musicians recording in the studio, housewives attending a cooking class.  And next to them, refugees [whom the Library has supported from the very beginning].    …

Impressive numbers

Even though the Library, as a strategic partner of the Future Library program (funded by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation), has for the past five years guided and mentored libraries around Greece, Veroia still maintains the primacy.  The numbers are staggering by Greek standards: 500 to 800 visitors daily, loaning more than 170,000 items annually (books, periodicals, DVDs, CD-ROMs, Kindles, board games, photographic equipment and more).  The majority of the visitors are children and women who love Modern Greek literature.  By contrast, men are fanatical readers of historical novels and Ancient Greek philosophy.

Beyond the numbers, Veroia’s phenomenon raises a question.  How has the Library influenced the community of this provincial city?   …

To learn the answer to this question and to read the testimonials of two students – one in Junior High and the other in High School – go to the full article (in Greek) by clicking on the link below.

http://www.kathimerini.gr/858674/gallery/politismos/vivlio/h-veroia-ekane-pali-to-8ayma-ths

 

Source: “Arts and Letters” insert, Kathimerini newspaper, Sunday, May 8, 2016

 

Columnist  Giota Myrsioti

 

 

 

 

Back