Spiritual Building Materials - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

Spiritual Building Materials

Description:

One has nature reserve in the churchyard. Two are part of ... concrete and glass modernism fails to withstand vandals and heating bills. Functional Conversion ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:519
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: Gregs150
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Spiritual Building Materials


1
Spiritual Building Materials
  • Greg Smith
  • Credo Consultancy and University of East London

2
Newhams Faith Groups
  • Over 300 groups
  • 181 Christian congregations
  • Pentecostal majority
  • 22 mosques
  • 10 other faiths (Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jewish
    etc.)
  • 50 groups began since 1990
  • 104 buildings (77 belong to Christian churches)

3
Types of Building
  • Historical treasure
  • Victorian worship barn
  • Traditional mission hall
  • Settlement centre
  • Post war rational
  • Functional conversion
  • Shop front presence
  • Modern multipurpose
  • Rent a space anywhere
  • Pilgrim congregation

4
Historical Treasure
  • Usually Anglican
  • Ancient parish
  • Set in a graveyard
  • 3 examples in Newham
  • One has nature reserve in the churchyard
  • Two are part of a team parish
  • Difficulty in adapting for community use
  • Grade 1 Listed Buildings

5
Victorian Worship Barn
  • Catholic, Free Church and some CofE.
  • Problems of Maintenance Cost
  • Listed Buildings (grade 2)
  • Some have reordered internally

6
(No Transcript)
7
Traditional Mission Hall
  • Mainly Evangelical or Old Pentecostal
  • Some limp on, some have renewed and grown
  • Some have changed hands
  • A few have adapted buildings through support from
    (quasi) denominations
  • One has relocated with a new building funded from
    LDDC compulsory purchase

8
(No Transcript)
9
Settlement Centre
  • Large Victorian Christian Foundations
  • Multi Agency Community Work
  • Few retain own congregational life or spiritual
    emphasis
  • Several have converted to housing projects

10
(No Transcript)
11
Post War Rational
  • Replacing what Hitler demolished
  • or should have demolished
  • Free church ecumenism (some CofE and RC)
  • tentatively multipurpose often with totally
    separate church hall
  • concrete and glass modernism fails to withstand
    vandals and heating bills

12
(No Transcript)
13
Functional Conversion
  • Mainly new faith communities
  • Many Pentecostal and Muslim examples
  • Use large houses, garages, snooker halls, shops,
    cinemas, warehouses.
  • One Anglican has converted the vicarage
  • Planning Problems over change of use in
    residential areas

14
(No Transcript)
15
CHRISTIAN CHURCHES
16
Mosques, Mandirs and Gurudwaras
17
Shop Front Presence
  • Many Muslim and Pentecostal examples
  • Many such properties available often on medium
    term lease
  • Avoids major planning disputes
  • Some preserve quasi commercial uses, e.g. Café or
    bookshop
  • convenient for local drop in users

18
(No Transcript)
19
Modern Multipurpose
  • Mainly Church of England
  • One Hindu example in disused school.
  • Depend on partnership with state or voluntary
    sector organisation
  • Housing, Health service and Community / Youth
    service examples
  • Often complete new build
  • Not always sustainable under faith community
    management

20
(No Transcript)
21
Rent a Space Anywhere
  • Mainly new churches
  • especially black majority Pentecostals
  • rent churches, schools, gym, town hall
  • often interim stage, wanting to buy

22
Pilgrim Congregation
  • Using homes and/or minibuses, occasionally rent a
    venue
  • Towards the virtual cyber church
  • Travel light, minimal costs maximum flexibility
  • Few sustained examples in East London (mostly
    charismatic, or an order)
  • Not a proper, visible church?

23
APOSTOLIC OR ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION?
  • Using redundant places of worship
  • Chapels, churches and synagogues
  • become mosques, mandirs, Pentecostal centres
  • some change owners and uses several times over
    centuries

24
(No Transcript)
25
Contemporary Uses
  • Redundant churches become, schools, factories,
    warehouses, housing
  • Some become secular community facilities
  • Charity Law demands sale to highest bidder
  • Some sites are cleared for new commercial
    buildings

26
ARCHITECTURAL MIX
27
Theology, Mission and Ecclesiology
  • Is the group for itself or for wider community?
  • Is the group bound to a single ethnic culture?
  • Is it willing to adapt to modernity /
    postmodernity?
  • Does the group want to recruit?
  • Is the mission purely spiritual or more
    wholistic?
  • Is the group purist or pragmatic?
  • Will it accept dirty money?
  • Is the group a sect, denomination or church?

28
Material Constraints
  • Existing built environment
  • State of the property market
  • Endowed funds of the congregation or denomination
  • Mean income of members
  • Giving levels of members (cash and labour)
  • Social capital links to people of wealth and
    power
  • Legal constraints, e.g. planning and charity law

29
Religious Buildings A secularisation paradigm
  • Pre Modern We build a temple to the glory of,
    reflecting the image of our God. God dwells
    there. This building demonstrates the greatness
    of our city / civilisation.
  • Modern We build or just rent a meeting place
    where Gods people can meet to worship and pray.
    God is in the midst of the people. In a
    competitive market the size and quality of the
    building shows the status of our faith community.
  • Post Modern As a spiritual consumer I dont need
    a building or even a faith community. If the
    religious institution keeps a building it must
    use it to meet other marketable consumer needs.

30
Conclusion
  • In general faith communities in Newham are firmly
    in the modern era with regard to their use of
    buildings.
  • Material, especially economic, factors dominate
    decisions about the purchase, renovation and use
    of buildings.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com