UPDATE on Partners:
1700 Sansom Street
10th Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19103
[email protected]
www.sacredplaces.org
(215) 567-3234
Board of Directors
The Reverend Dr. Thomas E. Frank, Chair
The Reverend Dr. Roy G. Almquist
The Reverend Dennis A. Andersen
The Reverend Dr. Eugene C. Bay
The Very Reverend Msgr. John F. Canary
David R. Cooper
Mary Werner DeNadai, FAIA
The Reverend Dr. W. Wilson Goode, Sr.
The Reverend Pierce W. Klemmt
Corlis S. Moody
James R. Nader, FAIA
The Reverend R. Scott Sheldon
Gordon R. Woodrow
Staff
A. Robert Jaeger, Executive Director
Tuomi Joshua Forrest, Associate Director
Gianfranco Grande, Director of
Development; Director, Chicago Office
Geoffrey Harden, Office and Information
Technology Manager
Marie Malloy, Director of Operations
Sarah F. Peveler, Senior Trainer
Carrie Stavrakos, Director, Pennsylvania
Regional Office
Elizabeth Terry, Director of Training
Suzanne Yowell, Project Manager,
Texas Office
Sacred Places Production
Neeta McCulloch, Editor
Planning for the Adaptive Use of Historic Churches
Johnstown, PA
Partners is working in the Cambria City neighborhood with
community leaders, parishioners, and the Johnstown Area Heritage
Association (JAHA) to find new uses for three significant historic
church buildings – St. Columba’s, Ss. Casimir and Emerich, and
Immaculate Conception – that were closed in 2009 after five parishes
were merged into one by the Roman Catholic Diocese of AltoonaJohnstown.
A mid-November community-wide design charette is being held
to produce draft concepts for reusing the churches that focus on
creating arts/performance space, space for education or social service
programs, and business or commercial use.
Over the past few months, work has centered on forming a steering
committee as a prelude to the charette – and to help carry work
forward after its conclusion. Numerous city leaders are serving on
the committee, including the City Manager and three City Council
members, as well as a representative from US Congressman Mark
Critz’s office. There are also representatives from the arts community,
Diocese, and JAHA, and an architect and city planner. With such
broad interest, it is hopeful that the community can find new ways to
use these significant buildings.
Great Barrington, MA - written by Sally Harris
On a visit to my hometown, Dallas, TX, Partners’ Executive Director
Bob Jaeger and I walked through a huge abandoned church to see if
there was anything we could do to help save it. Built in 1904 of brick,
with huge limestone columns, the elegant building was wrapped with
chain-link fencing, humbly awaiting demolition. The church and
its small parcel of land are part of a massive redevelopment plan for
a local high school. The building’s owner, the Dallas Independent
School District, is asking $1.2 million for it, which makes the
possibility of finding a buyer bleak. A local lawyer successfully fought
for a stay of execution, but only until last August. With no vision – and
no partners in the community to create one – there is no hope for this
church.
I look at all churches differently now. My own, St. James Episcopal
Church, a 150-year-old stone structure in Great Barrington, MA,
faced a similar fate. In 2008, the back wall partially collapsed, causing
the town’s building inspector to condemn it. With repairs estimated at
over a million dollars, many lost heart. Others believed it was morally
wrong to repair the structure when there is so much need in the world.
Demolition became, for many, a preferred option.
Bob spoke to our congregation last February. “You are not alone,”
he said, and proceeded to tell us stories about successfully saving
churches. With the wrecking ball idling nearby, I made an anonymous
offer: a non-profit would be created to buy the church, and
3 • Sacred Places • www.sacredplaces.org • Fall 2010