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The Future of Libraries – 2035

by | Oct 16, 2025 | Future of Healthcare

Futurist Speaker Thomas Frey Blog: The Future of Libraries

Upon entering, patrons are welcomed by a holographic AI receptionist ready to assist with anything they need.

I wrote my first column on the future of libraries in 2004, a time when many people were predicting libraries were going away. Digital books were emerging, the internet was becoming ubiquitous, and tech pundits were declaring physical libraries obsolete. Twenty-one years later, libraries are still going strong.

In fact, they’re thriving in ways those early digital prophets never anticipated. American Library Association data shows that public library visits have rebounded to pre-pandemic levels, with over 1.3 billion visits annually across the United States. Even more telling, 95% of libraries now offer formal or informal digital literacy training, positioning themselves as essential bridges in our increasingly digital world. Libraries will still be going strong in 2035, but they will have vastly different capabilities and uses than anything we can imagine today.

The Great Reinvention

The library of 2035 will be unrecognizable to someone transported from 2004. While books will still exist – and remain surprisingly popular – they’ll represent just one facet of institutions that have evolved into comprehensive community intelligence centers. Think of them as the physical manifestation of humanity’s collective knowledge, augmented by artificial intelligence and accessible through technologies that blur the line between digital and physical reality.

The transformation is already underway. Today, 63% of library professionals identify 24/7 access to materials as the most important feature they want to implement. This isn’t just about extending hours – it’s about fundamentally reimagining how communities interact with information and resources around the clock. By 2035, libraries will operate as always-on community neural networks, processing and distributing knowledge, skills, and resources with unprecedented efficiency.

AI: The Ultimate Librarian

Artificial intelligence will revolutionize libraries in ways that make today’s search engines look primitive. Imagine walking into a library where an AI system has already analyzed your research history, current projects, and learning style to curate a personalized knowledge pathway. This isn’t science fiction – it’s the logical evolution of systems already being tested today.

These AI librarians won’t replace human librarians; they’ll amplify their capabilities exponentially. While AI handles routine inquiries and resource recommendations, human librarians will focus on complex problem-solving, community building, and helping people navigate the ethical implications of our AI-saturated world. The partnership between human intuition and machine processing will create research experiences that are both deeply personal and incredibly powerful.

Libraries will become centers for AI literacy – a skill that will be as fundamental in 2035 as reading is today. Current research shows that libraries are already making AI literacy a primary focus of professional development efforts. By 2035, every library will offer comprehensive programs teaching people how to work with AI systems, recognize AI-generated content, and understand the implications of algorithmic decision-making in their lives.

The sophistication of these AI systems will be staggering. They’ll analyze speech patterns to detect when someone is struggling with a concept and automatically adjust explanations. They’ll recognize when a student is researching a sensitive topic and provide appropriate resources and support. They’ll even predict community information needs based on local trends and global events, pre-positioning resources and expertise where they’ll be needed most.

Futurist Speaker Thomas Frey Blog: The Ultimate Librarian

Step into history as Nikola Tesla comes alive in a hyper-realistic interactive hologram you can engage with at the library of the future

Extended Reality: Beyond the Physical

Virtual and augmented reality will transform libraries into portals to infinite worlds. Already, pioneering libraries are experimenting with VR headsets that transport learners to historical epochs, offering first-hand encounters with ancient Rome or bustling medieval marketplaces. By 2035, this will be standard equipment in every library system.

Imagine studying the Civil War by walking through Gettysburg as the battle unfolds around you. Picture learning marine biology by swimming through a coral reef, observing ecosystems that exist thousands of miles away or no longer exist at all. These aren’t distant dreams – they’re inevitable realities based on technology trajectories that are accelerating every year.

AR will enhance physical collections in ways that seem magical today. Hover your smart glasses over a historical artifact, and detailed 3D models, multimedia archives, and contextual information will appear in your field of vision. Ancient pottery will come alive with animations showing how it was made. Historical documents will display translations, background information, and connections to related materials automatically.
The implications go far beyond entertainment or education. Libraries will become training centers for jobs that don’t exist yet, using VR to simulate work environments and scenarios. They’ll help people overcome phobias, practice social interactions, and explore career possibilities in completely safe virtual environments.

Blockchain: The Trust Layer

Blockchain technology will solve problems libraries have wrestled with for decades while creating entirely new possibilities. By 2035, every library will issue verifiable digital credentials that can’t be faked, altered, or lost. Complete a course, master a skill, or contribute to a community project, and you’ll receive a blockchain-verified credential that will be recognized globally.

This isn’t just about certificates and badges. Libraries will use blockchain to create secure, permanent archives of community knowledge. Local history, government proceedings, environmental data, and cultural expressions will be preserved in tamper-proof digital formats that will last for generations. When a small town’s newspaper closes or a community organization disbands, their knowledge and history won’t disappear – it will live on in the blockchain.

The technology will also revolutionize resource sharing between libraries. Imagine a global network where any library patron can access specialized materials from any library worldwide, with blockchain ensuring proper attribution, usage tracking, and compensation. Rare books, specialized databases, and unique collections will become globally accessible while maintaining proper security and provenance.

Futurist Speaker Thomas Frey Blog: The Always-Open Library

By 2035, libraries will function as 24/7 community hubs, with smart locker networks bringing books, tools, and tech to everyday places like grocery stores, transit stations, and co-working spaces.

The Always-Open Library

Perhaps the most profound change will be the concept of libraries as 24/7 community resources. Smart locker networks will extend library access to grocery stores, transit stations, and community centers. Pick up a book on your way to work, and return it while shopping for groceries. The library will come to you, rather than requiring you to come to it.

These aren’t simple book lockers. They’ll house tablets, laptops, mobile hotspots, maker tools, musical instruments, and whatever else the community needs. Sixty percent of library professionals already rank multiple locker sizes as important for holding various items beyond books. By 2035, the “Library of Things” will be a comprehensive community resource sharing network that makes expensive tools and equipment accessible to everyone.

Remote work and digital nomadism will accelerate this trend. Libraries will operate satellite locations in unexpected places – airports, shopping malls, co-working spaces, even people’s homes. The physical library building will become the flagship of a distributed network that serves the entire community wherever they are.

Community Intelligence Centers

Libraries will evolve into something unprecedented in human history: community intelligence centers that combine the functions of libraries, schools, innovation labs, social services, and civic engagement platforms. They’ll be the places where artificial intelligence meets human wisdom, where global knowledge connects with local needs.

These centers will host everything from traditional book clubs to blockchain workshops. They’ll offer services ranging from 3D printing to meditation classes. They’ll provide access to technologies like brain-computer interfaces and quantum computers that individuals could never afford on their own. Most importantly, they’ll serve as neutral spaces where communities can come together to solve problems, share knowledge, and build social cohesion in an increasingly fragmented world.

The data is already pointing in this direction. Modern libraries are expanding their role as innovation hubs by creating makerspaces equipped with 3D printers, laser cutters, and VR equipment. By 2035, these spaces will house technologies we can barely imagine today – perhaps including early versions of molecular assemblers, neural interface devices, and quantum simulation systems.

The Human Element Amplified

Technology will amplify rather than replace the human elements that make libraries special. Librarians will become community learning architects, designing experiences that help people navigate an increasingly complex world. They’ll be part teacher, part therapist, part technology guide, and part community organizer.

The role will require new skills and perspectives. Librarians of 2035 will need to understand AI systems, virtual reality design, blockchain protocols, and neurodiversity accommodation. They’ll also need deeper skills in conflict resolution, mental health support, and community organizing as libraries become central to addressing social challenges.

But the core mission remains unchanged: democratizing access to information, knowledge, and opportunity. Libraries have always been about equity – ensuring that everyone, regardless of economic status, has access to the tools they need to learn, grow, and contribute to society. In 2035, when those tools include advanced AI, immersive virtual environments, and blockchain-verified credentials, libraries will be more important for social equity than ever before.

Futurist Speaker Thomas Frey Blog: Neuroadaptive Learning Environments

In the library of 2035, brain-computer interfaces and AI will tailor lighting, sound, and environment to each patron’s cognitive needs, creating truly personalized learning spaces.

Neuroadaptive Learning Environments

One of the most exciting developments will be libraries that adapt to how our brains actually work. Early brain-computer interface technology will allow library spaces to optimize learning experiences based on cognitive load and attention patterns. Struggling with a difficult concept? The library’s AI will detect your stress levels and automatically adjust lighting, temperature, and background sounds to optimize your learning environment.

These systems will be particularly transformative for neurodivergent learners. Spaces will automatically adjust to individual neurological needs – dimming lights for someone with sensory sensitivity, providing fidget tools for someone with ADHD, or creating quiet spaces for someone on the autism spectrum. The library of 2035 will truly serve everyone, regardless of how their brain is wired.

The Global Knowledge Commons

Perhaps most excitingly, libraries will become nodes in a global knowledge commons that makes humanity’s entire accumulated wisdom accessible to everyone. Language barriers will disappear through real-time translation. Geographic barriers will vanish through virtual reality. Economic barriers will crumble through the democratization of expensive technologies and resources.

A child in rural Kansas will have the same access to MIT’s laboratories, the Louvre’s collections, and the Library of Congress’s archives as someone living next door to these institutions. This isn’t just about information access – it’s about opportunity access. When anyone can learn from the world’s best teachers, access the most advanced tools, and collaborate with people globally, we’ll see an explosion of human potential that’s impossible to predict.

Futurist Speaker Thomas Frey Blog: The Global Knowledge Commons

The library of 2035 will blend advanced technology with human wisdom, serving as both a global network and a local gathering place.

Final Thoughts: The Unstoppable Institution

Libraries survived the printing press, radio, television, and the internet by continuously evolving to serve their communities’ changing needs. They’ll not only survive the AI revolution – they’ll be at its center, helping humanity navigate the most profound technological transformation in history.

The library of 2035 will be simultaneously more technological and more human than today’s libraries. More connected to global networks, yet more rooted in local communities. More virtual, yet more essential as physical gathering spaces. More automated, yet more dependent on human wisdom and judgment.

Those who predicted libraries would disappear fundamentally misunderstood what libraries really are. They’re not buildings that house books – they’re institutions that connect people with the knowledge, tools, and community they need to thrive. As long as humans need to learn, create, and connect with each other, we’ll need libraries.

The only question is whether we’ll have the vision and investment necessary to build the libraries our communities deserve. The future is arriving faster than most people realize, and communities that embrace these changes early will have tremendous advantages in education, innovation, and social cohesion.

Get ready. The library revolution is just beginning.

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