Stunning pics. Toronto has done a pretty bad job preserving history, but there's no doubt this happens all over NA.
For that reason alone it would probably have to be knocked down, or would at least be used as an excuse for knocking it down - like the Uptown Theatre.That would have been fun to make accessible.
Nothing this ornate, but if you are curious you really need to check out the heritage journal stacks at Gerstein Science Library at U of T - 5 stories of glass floored stacks with musty paper journals.
AoD
It was the sixth floor and above that was closed off to students.I suspect that library, had it survived, would have been retrofitted with a system of vacuum tubes and dummy elevators similar to those installed during Robarts' original construction at U of T. Remember, when Robarts opened, it was a closed-stack library and no one was permitted access above the fourth or fifth floors (can't remember which). The dummy elevators I believe are still in use, and the vacuum tubes for sending book request slips to runners based on each floor are still there, but I don't think they've been operable since even when I started as an undergraduate (1993).
Nothing this ornate, but if you are curious you really need to check out the heritage journal stacks at Gerstein Science Library at U of T - 5 stories of glass floored stacks with musty paper journals.
AoD