Project Details
- Project Name
- Elim Romanian Pentecostal Church and Christian Center
- Architect
- a+c architects
- Client/Owner
- Elim Romanian Pentecostal Church
- Project Types
- Religious
- Project Scope
- New Construction
- Size
- 62,000 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2021
- Shared by
- a+c architects
- Consultants
-
Design Architect and Architect of Record: a+c architects,Interior Designer: a+c architects,Electrical Engineer: DesignTeq Consulting Engineers,Civil Engineer: Gloger Engineers,Structural Engineer: SP Engineering,General Contractor: B8 Construction,Plumbing Engineer: DesignTeq Consulting Engineers,Other: Patsy McEnroe Photography
- Project Status
- Built
- Style
- Modern
Project Description
The design of the new Elim Romanian Pentecostal Church unites the outward/public and the inward/spiritual functions of the church’s program in a seamless and dynamic modern form. The structure is clad in sleek, light-colored limestone. The stone forms exterior walls that angle upward, revealing two key parts of the program: the more public-facing, glass-encased floors of multi-function spaces and classrooms, feeding into a more private main sanctuary that sits behind the stone wall and subtly rises above the diagonal form.
The main sanctuary seats 1,200 and is conceived as a completely internally focused space. Its minimalistic design is unadorned with the iconography and symbolism typical in Christian churches, relying instead on volume, light, and shadow to engage its occupants. With 40-foot ceilings, the sanctuary has stained-glass clerestories that line the top of the walls and allow daylight to pour in, taking advantage of the building’s mostly east-facing orientation and encouraging congregants to look upwards as they pray.
The glass-enclosed spaces contain classrooms, communal areas, and administrative offices, transparent and linked with the community through floor-to-ceiling windows. This glazed section of the building throws off a welcoming glow at night, drawing people in for social events and gatherings and providing an organic internal connection to the inner sanctuary for worship.
Above the multi-purpose area is a roof deck, currently under construction. Originally planned before COVID-19 as a spillover space for children’s activities, the space evolved in concept to become an essential support space for the church. The building’s diagonal form rises up to form a protective border around the roof deck, with a continuation of the glass wall beneath it providing aerial views across the neighborhood. Passive solar strategies allow walls to reflect heat and ensure the space can be used comfortably and efficiently even in cooler weather. With capacity to fit a large part of Elim’s congregation, the space can be flexibly used for worship, formal church service, or social activities – a crucial amenity in the event of future public health emergencies that may affect continuation of services.