Columbia University Libraries Studio

Studio

Space

Studio at Butler

The original Studio, Studio at Butler hosts talks, workshops, and the Friday Open Lab.

Open Lab at Studio at Butler
  1. Take the to 116th St. Columbia University.
  2. Cut midway across campus. With the Alma Mater statue to your left, turn right toward Butler Library.
  3. Upon entering Butler and passing through access control, turn left.
  4. Go around the center of the building to room 208B.
Studio at Lehman

Studio at Lehman offers Open Labs for four hours, four days a week as well as other programming.

Empty Studio at Lehman
  1. Take the to 116th St. Columbia University.
  2. Cut across campus to Amsterdam Ave.
  3. Cross Amsterdam, turn left, and turn right on 118th.
  4. Enter the International Affairs Building at 420 118th.
  5. Descend the stairs. Alternatively, take the left-hand elevators on entering IAB to the third floor. Enter Lehman Social Sciences Library on the third floor.
  6. After entering through the turnstile cut back across the front desk and follow the signs that read “DSSC” to a stairway among the DSSC computers. Alternatively, ask at the front desk for elevator access to the second floor.
  7. Studio at Lehman is at the bottom of the stairs, room 215.
Studio Remote

Original programming in digital scholarship streamed live weekly on YouTube.

Studio Remote Title Card
  1. Open your web browser.
  2. Navigate to the Studio Remote channel on YouTube.

Practice

The Columbia University Libraries Studio enables ethical, sustainable, collaborative, and FAIR digital, data-driven research and pedagogy.

  • Ethical: Technology is never neutral
  • Sustainable: Scholarship is not merely for now
  • Collaborative: We learn best from each other
  • FAIR: Work at the Studio should be findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable

The Columbia University Libraries Studio invites interested scholars to base their digital, data-driven research and pedagogy on our principles.

As the Studio grows, this space will include links to resources to help introduce scholars to our practice. We invite you to read “Sustainable Authorship in Plain Text using Pandoc and Markdown” by Columbia’s Dennis Tenen and Grant Wythoff as an example of the kind of approach we hope to model.