Photographer Jeffrey Martin documents the historical books on display in the Strahov monastery's Philosophical Hall, as seen from the mezzanine. Photographer Jeffrey Martin documents the historical books on display in the Strahov monastery's Philosophical Hall, as seen from the mezzanine. JEFFREY MARTIN AND his robot-driven camera capture images in the Philosophical Hall of the 868-year-old Strahov monastery library in Prague. JEFFREY MARTIN AND his robot-driven camera capture images in the Philosophical Hall of the 868-year-old Strahov monastery library in Prague. Jeffrey Martin and his robot-driven camera capture images in the Philosophical Hall of the 868-year-old Strahov monastery library in Prague. Photo: Evan Rail/Wired.com Photographer Jeffrey Martin documents the historical books on display in the Strahov monastery's Philosophical Hall, as seen from the mezzanine. Photo: Evan Rail/Wired.com The Canon 550D that's used to create an interactive panorama of the Philosophical Hall's books is controlled by a robot. Photo: Evan Rail/Wired.com The GigaPanBot camera controller fires Jeffrey Martin's Canon 550D, capturing nearly 3,000 photos that will be woven into a high-definition panoramic image. Photo: Evan Rail/Wired.com An interior shot shows the fresco above the Philosophical Hall's giant bookshelves. Image: Jeffrey Martin, 360 Cities A close-up of the Philosophical Hall's fresco shows the detail captured by the individual images that make up Jeffrey Martin's panorama. Image: Jeffrey Martin, 360 Cities Rare books fill the Philosophical Hall's shelves. Image: Jeffrey Martin, 360 Cities A close-up of two books from the Philosophical Hall's collection. Image: Jeffrey Martin, 360 Cities A wide shot shows the Philosophical Hall's ceiling fresco in its entirety. Image: Jeffrey Martin, 360 Cities A closer look at the Philosophical Hall's fresco, which was completed by Franz Anton Maulbertsch in 1794. Image: Jeffrey Martin, 360 Cities A close-up of the Philosophical Hall's fresco. Image: Jeffrey Martin, 360 Cities Behind a velvet rope, tourists look into the Philosophical Hall from the normal viewing station in the hallway. Photo: Evan Rail/Wired.com Historic books line the walls of the Philosophical Hall. Image: Jeffrey Martin, 360 Cities Another close-up of the Philosophical Hall's fresco. Image: Jeffrey Martin, 360 Cities Jeffrey Martin's massive panoramic image gives viewers a detailed look at the spines of books in the Strahov monastery library. Image: Jeffrey Martin, 360 Cities Jeffrey Martin adjusts the robot-driven camera in the Philosophical Hall of the Strahov monastery library. Photo: Evan Rail/Wired.com

PRAGUE — On a brisk but beautiful February afternoon, Jeffrey Martin and his robotic camera stand inside one of the Czech capital’s most gawk-worthy attractions: the gloriously decorated Philosophical Hall, a Baroque reading room in the city’s 868-year-old Strahov monastery library.

Though he’s a photographer, the 34-year-old Martin doesn’t seem to notice the rare books, ornate marquetry or heroic statues in the recently restored hall. He doesn’t even glance at the historical figures in the massive fresco — depicting “the intellectual progress of mankind” — on the ceiling.

Instead, he is listening, carefully following the click-focus-click rhythm of his robot-controlled Canon 550D.

“I’ve gotten pretty good at recognizing the pattern,” he says. “If the shutter doesn’t click, I can jump up and hit pause.”

Occasionally his robotically controlled camera can’t find a focus within the few seconds the GigaPanBot has allotted for each shot in the dim indoor setting. So Martin listens, jumping up once in a while for a do-over, knowing that later he’ll merge a few thousand of these pictures into what he’s calling the world’s largest indoor photograph: a 40-gigapixel, 360-degree image of the hall that weighs in at 283 GB.

The finished Strahov library panorama, released Tuesday on Martin’s website, is a zoomable, high-resolution peek inside one of Prague’s most beautiful halls, a repository of rare books that is usually off-limits to tourists (a few of whom can be seen standing behind the velvet rope at the room’s normal viewing station).

Martin’s panorama lets you examine the spines of the works in the Philosophical Hall’s 42,000 volumes, part of the monastery’s stunning collection of just about every important book available in central Europe at the end of the 18th century — more or less the sum total of human knowledge at the time.

Martin got special permission from the library to pursue the project. He didn’t, however, get permission to wear his street shoes indoors. He’s complemented his fingerless gloves and down vest — it’s cold in here — with a pair of oversize, felt-soled slippers for the sake of the polished parquet floor.

To capture the images, the German-made GigaPanBot sends the camera on a pattern that starts at the very top of the library, going back and forth in rows, working its way downward over five days of shooting.

‘That’s one advantage of shooting in an 18th-century library — my camera is the least valuable thing in the room.’

“I started from the ceiling, and by the time they kicked me out at 5 p.m. the first day, I had done maybe 20 percent of the hall,” Martin says. “So I hit pause and left everything right where it was until the next morning. That’s one advantage of shooting in an 18th-century library — my camera is the least valuable thing in the room.”

The next step: turning 2,947 individual shots into a single picture. It’ll take a day of mostly automated post-processing to correct colors and exposures from RAW image files.

“That dark corner and the bright ceiling are shot at the same exposure,” Martin says. “My goal is to get something that doesn’t have dark spots and bright spots — and also something that looks natural.”

During assembly of the massive panorama, Martin’s program will take more than 111 hours to stitch everything together.

“When you give it 10 pictures, it fits them together no problem,” Martin says. “But when you give it 3,000 images, there’s bound to be some issues.” After the initial layout, Martin will spend another 20 hours fixing a misaligned bookshelf, a few holes in the floor and other errors.

From inside the library, you can see why historians, scholars and travelers would flock here. A giant, four-volume set marked Musée Français, contained in a standalone, statue-topped wooden case, is believed to be one of only four extant copies. It’s a gift from Marie Louise, the second wife of Emperor Napoleon. (The French emperor is said to have had the rest of the print run destroyed because it contained evidence that certain Louvre treasures had been plundered from Italy.)

The room’s walnut paneling, gilt laurels and Escher-like inlaid marquetry make quite an impression. Beyond the rare tomes, guests who look carefully at the bookshelves might spot two hidden doors, masked with fake book spines, that lead to secret stairways — something you probably won’t catch in Martin’s panorama.

In other regards, viewing Martin’s web-based panorama might actually be better than an actual visit, especially when it comes to exploring the fresco high above the books. Completed in 1794, Franz Anton Maulbertsch‘s trompe l’oeil ceiling depicts dozens of historical and religious figures, ranging from Noah and Moses to the French encyclopedists.

In real life, from 45 feet down, you might wish you could hit Shift to zoom.