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Library Relocations Nationwide & International – Efficient, Reliable, Gentle

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A library move is not a normal relocation. It’s not just about quantity, weight, and transport, but above all about classification systems, collection security, conservation protection, and depending on library type, operational continuity. Most important: the shelving order must be maintained, collections must not be mixed up, and sensitive media require gentle, traceable handling.

Gebr. Roggendorf GmbH supports library relocations as structured transfer projects, from planning and collection safeguarding to logistics and documented handover. We assist public libraries, academic libraries, archives, and collections nationwide and internationally.

What a Library Move Entails

A library move is a transfer of holdings with clear rules: media must be sorted, protected, traceable, and moved to the new location on schedule. In practice, a smooth relocation succeeds especially when logistics, classification, and documentation are closely coordinated.

Goal: Preserving Shelving Order, Collection Security, and Controlled Handovers

Three central goals take center stage:

  1. Maintain the existing classification and order,

  2. ensure the unambiguous retrievability of all collections,

  3. document handovers and processes in a traceable manner.

From this arise clearly defined processes for packing, transport, tracking, and subsequent shelving at the destination. A structured approach, a clear classification system, and trained staff ensure that every item retains its place and collections are handed over completely and correctly.

Planning, Procedure, and Schedule for a Library Move

A professional library move begins long before the first box is packed. Here, planning is not “nice to have”, but rather the prerequisite for later finding and using the collections.

Project Planning and Coordination

Depending on the scope, moving stages, responsibilities, and handover points are defined. Clearly specified construction or relocation windows (e.g., relocating archives section by section) and coordinated communication channels with library management, departments, and if necessary, construction/project management are typical.

Duration and Moving Schedule

The time required for a library move depends less on square meters and more on collection structure, access points, classification complexity, special holdings, and whether operations are to continue in parallel. A precise schedule prevents bottlenecks in storage areas, transport routes, and delivery zones.

Operating During the Move: Stay Open and Still Move

Often, the question is not whether to relocate, but how to maintain ongoing operations. Especially for public libraries or university sites, a full closure is not always possible or desired.

Partial Moves, Staged Relocation, and Safe Transitions

In practice, staged relocation concepts prove their worth: collections are transferred step by step while defined areas remain usable. This includes clearly marked restricted areas, controlled routing, and clear responsibilities to ensure no media ends up “in between” or “outside” the system.

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Order-Preserving Move: Maintain Order, Ensure Retrievability

Maintaining the shelving order is one of the core objectives. A library move is only successful if, at the destination, media are placed exactly where they belong according to the classification.

Preserving Order Without Mixing

To achieve this, holdings are handled in order-preserving units. It is essential that packing, transport, and unloading are organized in a way that preserves sequence and allocation, even with large quantities.

Preventing Lost Items and Mix-ups

Errors usually do not arise during carrying, but at transfer points: during packing, transloading, or interim storage. Clear labeling, controlled handover points, and documented processes are key here.

Inventory and Tracking: Barcode, RFID, and Lists

Many institutions want to know how inventory and tracking can be implemented in practice, especially with large collections and multiple moving phases.

Stocktaking and Labeling

Depending on the starting point, inventory lists, barcode scans, or RFID may be used. It is essential that labeling is consistent and fits the later shelving/re-shelving process.

Tracking & Chain of Custody

For sensitive or particularly valuable holdings, tighter tracking may be appropriate, up to and including documented handovers and a traceable chain of custody. The goal is transparency: Where is each unit and when was it handed over?

Packing and Conservation Protection

Not all media are the same. Books, journals, archival materials, and special collections each need suitable protective measures.

Packing for Books, Journals, and Archival Material

Depending on the collection, sturdy archive boxes, suitable protective materials, and dust- and shock-reducing packing solutions are used. It is important that packing not only protects, but also enables clear association with later shelving.

Special Collections, Early Printed Books, Manuscripts, and Collections

With rare books, manuscripts, estates, and collection materials, conservation care is critical. Here, the focus is on protection against mechanical stress, clean handling, and, depending on the collection, additional documentation (e.g., condition reports/photo documentation).

Climate-Controlled Transport and Monitoring

For sensitive media, climate-controlled transport with temperature and humidity monitoring may be important, especially with sensitive collections or particular conservation requirements. It is crucial to clarify transport and intermediate storage conditions in advance and integrate them into the process.

Shelving Systems, Mobile Racks, and Rolling Shelving: Dismantling, Moving, Reassembly

In library relocations, it’s often not only the collection that is affected, but also the infrastructure, especially for storage solutions.

Dismantling and Reassembling Shelving Systems

Shelf dismantling, transport, and shelf assembly must be integrated into the project plan to ensure collections do not end up “without a destination”. With compact/mobile shelving systems, coordination between dismantling, transport, reassembly, and subsequent placement is essential.

Storage and Site Changes: New Shelving or Reorganization

If the classification or space usage changes (e.g., new storage structure), clear shelving and reorganization logic are necessary. In such cases, it’s not only about order-preserving moves, but also the controlled implementation of new shelving plans.

Data Protection, Loan Data, and Confidential Documents

Libraries and academic institutions often work with sensitive data: loan records, user accounts, administrative documents, or archived personal records.

GDPR-Compliant Handling of User Data

If loan records, interlibrary loan documents, or internal administrative documents are part of the relocation, clear rules must be set for how data are protected, transported, and handed over. Access and permissions should be clearly defined for the project.

NDA and Confidentiality in the Project Team

In sensitive projects, non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) and clear instructions for handling confidential materials are an important part of project security.

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Documented Handovers: Protocols, Condition Reports, and Handover Points

Transparent handovers are crucial—for internal traceability, acceptance, and the assurance that collection units arrive fully.

Handover Protocols, Condition Reports, and Photo Documentation

Depending on the project, handovers can be logged and, for sensitive collections, complemented by condition or photo documentation. This provides clarity in the case of complaints, questions, or later audits.

Liability, Insurance, and Risk Minimization

In case of damage or loss, it must be clearly settled in advance how liability and insurance are handled. Library collections have not only material but often historical or academic value.

Transport Insurance and Liability Framework

Insurance coverage and liability issues are clarified project-specifically, tailored to the collection, transport type, protective measures, and documentation requirements. The aim is comprehensible coverage without room for interpretation.

Library Relocation Costs: Project-Based Calculation

The cost of a library move depends on the scope and requirements, particularly order preservation, special collections, access, interim storage needs, shelving systems, and the level of documentation desired.

Typical Calculation Factors

• Quantity and structure of holdings (book stock, journals, archival material)
• Complexity of classification/order-preserving units
• Special collections and conservation requirements
• Shelving systems (dismantling/assembly, mobile/rolling shelves)
• Inventory/tracking and documentation scope
• Staged planning and operational continuity (remaining open)

Reference Projects: Library Relocations with Experience

We have extensive experience with complex library relocations—from academic libraries and special libraries to large university libraries.
Here are some examples from our practice:

Selected Projects

University Library

Several tens of thousands of linear meters of library holdings
Relocation and cleaning of corresponding library shelves
Outbound and return relocations over several years
Separation of holdings with individual volume selection according to shelfmark list
Framework contract partner for many years

Academic Library

Several thousand linear meters of media holdings
Compaction and new shelving at the site
Move and compaction of media holdings at another location

National Library

Relocation of a national library with several tens of thousands of linear meters of books, including RARA collections (rare and valuable books)
Several hundred card catalog cabinets including contents
Move from 9 old locations to a new building
Scanning of several hundred thousand books to determine the new destination (reading room or stacks)
Re-shelving of large book collections for relocation to the reading room
International working group for major project

Why These References Are Relevant

These projects demonstrate:

  • Experience with different types of libraries (national, academic, university libraries)
  • Handling special collections (RARA, card catalogs, sensitive media)
  • Preserving classification and systematics (individual volume selection, re-shelving, new shelving)
  • Complex logistics (multiple sites, international projects, staging)
  • Technical expertise (scanning, inventory, shelf relocation)
  • Long-term partnerships (framework contracts, outbound and return relocations)

From academic special libraries to large national projects with several tens of thousands of linear meters—we understand the requirements for order-preserving, gentle, and documented library relocations.

Plan and Execute Library Moves in a Structured and Secure Way

Are you planning a library transfer, media relocation, archive move, or a change of location for your institution? Gebr. Roggendorf GmbH supports libraries and archives with structured planning, order-preserving processes, and gentle logistics—nationwide and internationally.

For a quick assessment, it is especially helpful to provide:
• Library type and collection structure (book/journal/archive/special collection)
• Classification/systematics requirements (maintain vs. reorganization)
• Shelving systems (mobile/rolling shelves, new installation)
• Requirements for inventory/tracking and documentation
• Timeframe, access, and desired operational continuity

Request your library move now to ensure order, collection, and operations remain reliably planned and maintained.

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