Subject: Materials in remote storage
The University of Pittsburgh now has a remote storage site for library materials, with good climate controls. Materials are being sent there from crowded libraries all over campus. I would like to know from other libraries who have remote storage areas how they handle books which are brittle and/or in poor condition with respect to housing in remote facilities. Are protective enclosures made for identified items? (e.g. a title which has passed through the brittle books searching, the bibliographer is not purchasing a replacement or having it filmed,but does not want to discard) How are items prepared for transport, either initially or if recalled for use by a patron? If recalled, are items in poor condition restricted to in-library use? Who makes this determination? If a recalled item was not previously identified as brittle can it be captured for the brittle books evaluation, or is it simply returned to storage? What are other important considerations? As mentioned above, the facility in question has good climate control. Also, books are shelved in accession order and therefore not subject to shifting and intershelving of new arrivals. Reply to me and I can summarize for the list, if there is sufficient interest. Nancy Hallock 403 Hillman Library University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, PA 15260 *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:47 Distributed: Sunday, February 28, 1993 Message Id: cdl-6-47-008 ***Received on Friday, 26 February, 1993