EMORY UNIVERSITYPrevious feature
1   OXFORD ROAD BUILDING (ADMISSION OFFICE)
2   B. JONES CENTER
3   HAYGOOD-HOPKINS GATE
4   THE QUADRANGLE (QUAD)
5   MICHAEL C. CARLOS MUSEUM
6   CONVOCATION HALL
7   CANNON CHAPEL
8   CALLAWAY CENTER
9   CANDLER LIBRARY
10   ROBERT W. WOODRUFF LIBRARY
11   GOIZUETA BUSINESS SCHOOL
12   DONNA AND MARVIN SCHWARTZ CENTER FOR PERFORMING ARTS
13   EMORY UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL
14   COX HALL
15   DOOLEY STATUE
16   ASBURY CIRCLE
17   EMORY STUDENT CENTER
18   FIRST-YEAR QUAD AND RESIDENCE HALLS
19   LULLWATER PRESERVE
20   NELL HODGSON WOODRUFF SCHOOL OF NURSING
21   MCDONOUGH FIELD
22   WOODRUFF P. E. CENTER
23   PSYCHOLOGY AND INTERDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES BUILDING (PAIS)
24   ATWOOD CHEMISTRY CENTER
25   MATH AND SCIENCE CENTER

Robert W. Woodruff Library

The Robert W. Woodruff Library, which houses the Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library on its ninth and 10th floors, is located near the center of campus. The Woodruff Library is one of Emory University's 11 libraries, and it is the largest. By the entrance of the library is a statue of Robert W. Woodruff the businessman and philanthropist who headed The Coca-Cola Company for many years and gave generously to Emory University. All Emory students have 24-hour library access during the week.

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Robert W. Woodruff Library
Robert W. Woodruff Library
Robert W. Woodruff Library
Robert W. Woodruff Library
Robert W. Woodruff Library
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Stuart A. Rose Rare Books Library

The Robert W. Woodruff Library

Robert W. Woodruff Statue

⭐ Stuart A. Rose Rare Books Library

The Stuart A. Rose Rare Books Library is located on the ninth and 10th floor of the Robert W. Woodruff Library. Since it is so high, it offers gorgeous views of Emory and Atlanta. It is home to original manuscripts from important literary figures such as Allen Ginsberg, Alice Walker, and Seamus Heaney. It also contains many documents from the civil rights movement, as well as documentation from Emory’s history—including club records and yearbooks. Students can visit on their own, with a class, or for archival research purposes.

⭐ The Robert W. Woodruff Library

Even after the 1955 renovation of the Candler Library, the university still needed more library space to meet the growing demands of research. To solve this, the Robert W. Woodruff Library was built and opened in 1969. The Robert Woodruff Library is 10 stories. The first floor has a coffee shop (Banjo), Student Technology Services, and group study spaces. The second floor is where students can borrow books and visit the service desks. On the third floor, you will find changing art exhibits, which are part of the Schatten Gallery. The fourth floor contains the Music & Media Library. The fifth through eighth floors are the stacks, home to roughly 3 million volumes. Within the stacks are cubicle spaces and group study rooms. The ninth and 10th floors are the Stuart A. Rose Rare Books Library.

⭐ Robert W. Woodruff Statue

By the entrance of the library is a statue of Robert W. Woodruff, the businessman and philanthropist who headed The Coca-Cola Company for many years and gave generously to Emory University. He donated $105 million in Coca-Cola stock in 1979–which was the largest gift given to a university at the time. That gift has grown into our endowment, valued at about $11.2 billion. This endowment allows us to have such a beautiful campus, recruit amazing faculty, and give scholarships to students.

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