If they can’t open it, how do they know it’s there? I don’t get it.
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Is there some rule against showing a picture of the National Library in the Times of India? :rolleyes:
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We looked and looked and looked and couldn’t find a trap-door. We have no idea how to get in the room. There was this big walled-up archway … but naaaaa that couldn’t have anything to do with it…:dubious:
I want the person who wrote this article to be given the position of city housing inspector in my town! “What do you mean, I built a garage without getting a permit? There’s no garage there. If there were a garage, there would be a door to it from my house. Can you find such a door?” 
Well, you see, there’s this cat that nobodies quite sure about.
Floorplans, oh Boy Genius.:rolleyes:
I call porn stash. 
And the eye-rolling is necessary why?
Besides, while you may be correct I didn’t see anything about it in the article, and furthermore; why would you necessarily expect the original floor plan of a 250-year-old building to be available? In a big enough structure, I don’t think it would be that hard to gloss over a missing hidden room, if the surrounding rooms are large enough, and particularly if it was a floor plan drawn up after the fact to decide whose desk should go where, or which section of the library stacks were going to be in which area.
No note/warning issued.
If you measure the floorplans, and sketch it out, a closed up area will be obvious.