Worship Facilities
Cathy Hutchison | Mar. 26, 2019
Four churches creating spaces based on neighborhood needs. How connected is your church to the community? Not the community you’ve created inside it. The community you would connect to if you stepped out the front door and just started walking. Of course, being what the community needs isn’t as easy as it sounds. Churches develop over time, and neighborhoods grow and evolve. These changes can sometimes result in disconnects. Here are four churches who decided to radically engage their communities, and how they are doing it.
Religion News Service
Caroline Cunningham | January 2, 2019
It was cold and dark on a December afternoon but the crowd at the Philadelphia Center for Architecture was packed in, standing at the back and down the sides of the room — clergy shoulder to shoulder with architects, ordinary citizens with community organizers. They were gathered to see the results of Infill Philadelphia, a design competition hosted every couple of years in the city to improve community spaces.
The Inquirer
Robert Jaeger & Beth Miller | December 10, 2018
In many cities and towns, a third or more of the historic sacred places are at risk of closing in the next 10 to 20 years unless new uses and new resources can be found. Losing these neighborhood anchors threatens the communities in which they sit, many of them low-income and disadvantaged.
Enter “Infill Philadelphia: Sacred Places/Civic Spaces,” the exciting new partnership between Partners for Sacred Places and the Community Design Collaborative. Its purpose is to generate innovative design concepts and solutions for the re-activation of underutilized spaces in local historic sacred places.
The Philadelphia Tribune
Samaria Bailey | December 7, 2018
The Philadelphia Masjid said Tuesday it will move forward with plans of opening a vocational school and housing following the Infill Philadelphia: Sacred Places/Civic Spaces collaborative design.
The masjid was one of three historic religious sites chosen for the pro-bono design project, which connected architecture firms to the houses of worship, so they could reimagine and enhance their spaces as community hubs.
PlanPhilly
Kimberly Haas | December 5, 2018
Philadelphia has no shortage of lux condos carved out of historic churches but how about a grocery story with stained glass windows?
That was one of the ideas shared Tuesday at a grand reveal of conceptual designs through a competition run by Philadelphia’s Community Design Collaborative and Partners for Sacred Places, a national nonprofit that works with congregations to repurpose underused religious buildings for community use.
The Philadelphia Citizen
James Meadows | October 16, 2018
The Annex saved Michael Major. In the mid-70s, when Major was a young teenager, his neighborhood in North Philadelphia was plagued by underperforming schools. Neither of his parents had graduated from high school, but they wanted their son to have better opportunities. The Annex, which was owned and operated by the Zion Baptist Church in North Philadelphia, was an oasis when options for advancement for young adults felt few and far between.
Community Design Collaborative
Rev. Kirk Berlenbach | November 8, 2018
“What if we started to think about church buildings differently? What if instead of the burden or inconvenience they might cause, we focused instead on their potential to make our community a better place? What if we dared to ask, “Can these bones live?””
If you drive around Philadelphia for more than ten minutes, chances are you will come across a closed church. Although they are sad to see, such shuttered or crumbling edifices are now so commonplace that many of us hardly notice. If they enter our consciousness at all, it is only in terms of how such derelict building will impact our property value or if some developer is going to try and squeeze in as many condos as possible and make parking even more of a nightmare.
Community Design Collaborative
Rev. Rebecca Blake | September 4, 2018
By Rev. Rebecca Blake, Pastor and Co-founder of Beacon
“If you had a 5,000 square foot building and large green space, what would you want to see in it that would benefit the neighborhood?”
I spent a lot of time asking that question as I met with neighbors, clergy, nonprofit directors, shop owners, and educators living and working in the Fishtown/Kensington neighborhood of Philadelphia in 2011 when Beacon was at the brink of closing or reinventing itself.
Hidden City Philadelphia
Starr Herr-Cardillo | August 17, 2018
It has been just over three months since the kickoff of Infill Philadelphia: Sacred Places/Civic Spaces, an initiative led by the Community Design Collaborative (Collaborative) and Partners for Sacred Places (Partners) that launched in June.
The endeavor, funded by the William Penn Foundation, seeks to help local congregations “re-envision underutilized, purpose-built religious properties as community hubs” by pairing them with community partners and design teams that will work to creatively brainstorm ways to repurpose underutilized space in manners that engage the surrounding community.
Community Design Collaborative
Linda Dottor | August 15, 2018
Imagine… a culinary incubator for “foodie-preneurs,” affordable housing with a day program for seniors, a Night Market showcasing healthy food and live music, a women’s self-defense training center, or a basketball clinic where both kids and adults can raise their game.
Sacred Places/Civic Spaces was made possible by the generous support of the William Penn Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.