Sacred Places Autumn/Winter 2018-2019 | Page 4

Sacred Places / Civic Spaces By Rachel Hildebrandt Senior Program Manager, Partners for Sacred Places I nfill Philadelphia: Sacred Places / Civic Spaces is a pioneering design project in Philadelphia that is bringing faith commu- nities together with architects and neighborhood leaders to find creative ways to rethink the use of urban sacred places, open- ing them into the larger civic commons and adding new energy to community life. This project responds to findings gleaned from a recent examination of the factors that contribute to congregational vulnerability and resilience. • Reactivate prototypical historic, purpose-built religious properties that present common design challenges The Philadelphia Masjid is famous for the food it prepares in its large kitchen. Sacred Places / Civic Spaces, funded by the William Penn Foundation, will add the design community's voice to the growing dialogue about the intersection between sacred places and commu- nity vitality. It has assembled working teams—each composed of a congregation, a community group, and a design firm—that is, through an iterative design process, envisioning a new future for each faith community’s property. Sacred Places / Civic Spaces is intended to: • Demonstrate that underutilized space in historic sacred properties throughout Philadelphia can be activated in ways that expand the civic commons, serve a larger secular purpose, 4 • Promote understanding of the realities faced by faith com- munities stewarding historic, purpose-built sacred places Funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts and con- ducted by PennPraxis in collaboration with Partners for Sacred Places, the 2017 research project produced an updated citywide inventory of older, purpose-built sacred places and an accompanying narrative that summarized key research findings. It con- firmed that unprecedented numbers of religious build- ings will be transitioned out of religious use in the years to come. Many of these build- ings will be adapted for resi- dential use or demol- ished—unless key constituen- cies come together to identify alternatives that encourage public uses and prevent un- necessary destruction and loss. and strengthen communities while also sustaining congrega- tions themselves SACRED PLACES • AUTUMN/WINTER 2018-19 • Develop innovative, replicable models in which religious buildings house a multitude of co-existing religious and secu- lar uses The three sacred places are: • The Philadelphia Masjid, which is collaborating with Peo- ple’s Emergency Center and HOK; • Wharton Wesley United Methodist Church, which is part- nered with ACHIEVEability and Brawer & Hauptman Archi- tects; and • Zion Baptist Church, which is working with Called to Serve CDC and Studio 6mm