University College Dublin Library

UCD Library
Leabharlann UCD
Country Ireland
Type Academic library
Location Belfield,
Dublin 4
Branches 5 libraries, 3 cultural heritage units
Collection
Size 841,576 print volumes; 261,892 e-Books; 98,680 journals; 323 databases; 30,000 Special Collections
Access and use
Population served 26,354 FTE students excluding overseas campuses
Other information
Staff 103.3 FTE
Website www.ucd.ie/library

UCD Library dates from the establishment of University College Dublin (UCD) as a constituent college of the National University of Ireland in 1908. It supports the learning, teaching and research needs of some 30,000 students and staff (plus a considerable number based in affiliated and otherwise related UCD programmes abroad) in a wide range of disciplines including agriculture,[1] architecture,[2] arts and humanities,[3] business studies,[4] engineering,[5] law,[4] medicine,[6] science,[7] social sciences[8] and veterinary medicine.[1] In 2015 UCD Archives [9] and the National Folklore Collection UCD[10] came under the administrative umbrella of UCD Library. University College Dublin (UCD) is the Republic of Ireland's largest university.[11] It is located in Dublin, capital of Ireland.

Buildings and locations

There are 5 UCD libraries: the James Joyce Library at Belfield serves as the administrative centre of the library system: it accommodates the central services and 85% of the stock; the Health Sciences library (for medicine, nursing and physiotherapy) is located in the UCD Health Sciences Centre at Belfield; Architecture (for architecture, landscape and planning) is in the Richview precinct at Belfield; Veterinary Medicine, located in the Veterinary Sciences Centre at Belfield; the UCD Michael Smurfit School of Business library[12] at the Blackrock Campus. Accommodation for readers consists of some 3,150 reading and study places, including some single and group study and PBL rooms, and a social learning area. Wireless internet is available throughout all of the libraries, there are wired network points provided, and power outlets are available to about a half of study seats. A number of IT Services open computer labs and PC clusters are located within the libraries.

Information resources

The Library as a whole contains over 800,000 print volumes, and access to over 260,000 e-books. Almost 80% of stock is on open access. Approximately 7,500 purchased monographs, and 2,500 donations or legal deposit items are added to stock each year, and 99,000 current journal titles and databases are available, the vast majority of which are e-journals. The Library is a European Documentation Centre, a national depository for United States government publications, and a legal deposit library for Irish publications. A small but significant holding of some 30,000 early printed books and special collections is housed in a separate bookstack with independent environmental control. In addition, almost 40,000 pre-1930 items are managed by them. UCD Archives and the National Folklore Collection at UCD house collections for use by the UCD community and external researchers.

The UCD Digital Library

The UCD Library supports digital repository services for dissemination of open access publications by university staff[13] as well as for management of digitised cultural heritage resources and data produced or consumed by the UCD community.[14]

In collaboration with UCD Research, there is interoperability between the Library Institutional Repository (IR) and the UCD Research Management System (RMS) providing a single route to update research profiles and deposit individual full text items. The institutional repository is based on DSpace and provides access to full text articles, working papers, reports, and other staff publications. It also provides a means of exporting information to a national open access repository, RIAN, as well as other subject-specific portals. The UCD Digital Library, the successor to the IVRLA project, is a platform for the dissemination of diverse digital content associated with the University. In addition to cultural heritage collections, additional content includes geographic, quantitative and qualitative data produced or consumed by the UCD community. The new platform went live in summer 2012, and a major upgrade including a responsive website for use on both mobile and desktop devices, plus other new features went live in November 2014.[14]

Library management system and other online environments

The Library website was completely re-designed and the content refreshed in 2011, and a further update completed summer 2014. A new Library Management System, from Innovative Interfaces went live in July 2012, and upgraded to the newer Sierra platform in May 2015.[15] In 2013 the Library piloted the LibGuides product as a complement to the website and decided to mainstream this from 2014 for subject and thematic guides.[16] In August 2014 the Library launched the Summon 2.0 web-scale discovery service, badged locally as OneSearch.[17] The Library also maintains a presence in the key social media. These include an instant messaging chat service, a Twitter feed, an Instagram presence, YouTube channels, a blog and a page on Facebook.[18] A mobile website and catalogue are available, with integration of these into the University app.

Services

Lending, document supply, information skills training, and reference and information services are available in all library locations. Print journals, reference materials, official publications, theses, and Special Collections materials are not available for loan. A charge is made for Inter-Library Loan and document supply. Copi Print provides print and copying facilities, on a paid self-service basis, in the libraries and in other University buildings.

Services are increasingly moving online, with online fines and charges payment introduced November 2013 using the University e-wallet system UCard, followed by online group study room booking from January 2014 using the Springshare product LibCal,[19] with the Library training calendar also moving to that platform in June 2014.[20] Laptop loans at the largest library moved to a self-service system in September 2014, and online booking of individual study rooms and the Postgraduate Research Centre commenced in February 2015.

The James Joyce and Health Sciences libraries provide a laptop loan service. This service enables students and staff to borrow laptops on a short-term basis within the confines of the Library.

Working in collaboration with other units at UCD, spaces are being created to host student support services, with both Maths and Writing Support now being operated from within Library spaces at the James Joyce Library.

The Short Loan collection in the James Joyce library and the entire stock of the Blackrock and Veterinary Medicine libraries uses RFID technology. This allows readers to borrow and return books without the assistance of library staff.

Opening hours[21] in each of the five UCD libraries vary throughout the year.

Online access is provided on a 24/7 basis to an extensive range of databases, information services, electronic journals, subject guides and e-Learning materials.

Liaison with other libraries and organisations

UCD Library participates in a number of collaborative initiatives and projects. These include IReL[22] (the Irish e-Library, an initiative funded by the Higher Education Authority[23] and Science Foundation Ireland to provide a world-class portfolio of e-journals to support research), IRIS (a company which manages the IReL initiative), ALCID[24] (a reciprocal access scheme for academic staff and postgraduate research students), ANLTC (the Academic and National Library Training Co-operative),[25] which provides a regular staff training and development programme, and the RIAN Project, funded through the Higher Education Authority's Strategic Innovation Fund[26] to provide e-repositories in each university, and a national portal, for open-access research publications. Internationally, the Library has participated in the past in a number of research projects funded through the European Commission's FRAMEWORK Programmes, and, as an affiliate member of the NEREUS Consortium,[27] participated in the NEEO (Network of European Economists Online)[28] project, funded by the eContentplus Programme, a multilingual portal to the full-text research outputs of 500 top researchers in the partner institutions. UCD Library was a partner with the Library of the Queen's University of Belfast in the PADDI (Planning Architecture Design Database Ireland) project and both libraries continue to jointly operate the PADDI Database service.[29] UCD Library is an institutional member of SCONUL, CONUL,[30] IATUL,[31] IFLA and LIBER.[32]

References

Coordinates: 53°18′25″N 6°13′23″W / 53.306816°N 6.222995°W / 53.306816; -6.222995

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.