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Ancient Athens
created the agora, an open-air marketplace and gathering spot
where the city’s residents could catch up on the latest news.
Medieval Europeans built their towns around huge cathedrals.
Today, our "third place"—the place we experience community in
addition to home and work—is often a Starbucks, bookstore, or
golf course.
After 10 years
working as an "imagineer" at Disney, Mel McGowan dreamed of
the church being this third place. Today, McGowan serves as
president of Visioneering Studios (a partner ministry with
Church Development Fund, Stadia: New Church Strategies, and
corporate parent Provision Ministry Group) and leads a team
committed to using architecture as an evangelistic tool.
Visioneering Studios
(www.visioneeringstudios.com) believes everyday church design
is ineffective—for leaders, for the churches they serve, and
for the communities they hope to reach. Instead, the team at
Visioneering suggests a new approach for conceptualizing and
constructing these facilities.
Visioneering’s
project managers, designers, and architects understand the
pull of the destination; in their previous careers they helped
create resorts in Las Vegas, luxury hotels in Asia, and the
Disney-MGM park in Paris.
"People travel from
around the world to visit these places, and spend hundreds of
dollars to experience them," says McGowan. "We believe the
techniques used to build those places can be applied to
ministry facilities, as well. We’re not interested in
gimmicks, but in architectural evangelism: creating church
buildings that inspire and educate people, and that become
tools to communicate the gospel."
Preventing
Problems
Architectural evangelism means more than attractive
buildings. In fact, facilities communicating the good news are
the finished product of a larger process. This process, which
includes interactive sessions with church leadership,
strategic analysis, and detailed budget development, can
prevent common problems that plague church building
projects.
For many churches,
these problems begin when the ministry staff must serve as
site planners and real estate developers as well as spiritual
leaders.
"Statistics show that
often the senior minister or another key member of leadership
will leave the church by the end of a building project," says
McGowan. "I want to see the preaching minister or executive
pastor leading out of his giftedness, not trying to be a
general contractor."
Visioneering asks
church leaders to share the dreams and goals for their campus,
then transforms those ideas into recommended site plans and
designs. This work is just one part of a larger,
multidisciplinary package of services that can take the church
from dream to bricks-and-mortar reality.
Visioneering’s
services not only allow church leaders to lead, but also
assist building committees focusing attention—and dollars—on
the wrong things. "In the last 10 years, churches increased
spending on facilities by 10 percent," says McGowan. "And in
those same 10 years, church attendance decreased by 10
percent. Churches are throwing more money at less effective
buildings."
Creating
Paradigms
So while
the principle "form follows function" still rings true—a
ministry facility should be designed to facilitate
ministry—Visioneering Studios encourages its clients to
consider other paradigms as well.
•
Form follows
"fiction"—"The environment of a
church helps tell the story," McGowan says. "We work with each
church to develop a foundational ‘big idea’ which becomes the
conceptual overlay for the entire campus
plan."
The Visioneering team
discovers, rather than dictates, each church’s big
idea.
"The team met with
our ministers and elders and listened to our goals of being
open to the community," says Jim Hanchey, executive minister
at Heritage Christian Church, Fayetteville, Georgia. "And they
reflected it back to us literally overnight. When we met the
second day, they shared really insightful observations—things
we hadn’t even realized about ourselves. We now have master
plans that reflect our vision."
Because each church
has its own culture and goals, the big ideas unifying each
plan differ from project to project.
In Beloit, Wisconsin,
the Visioneering team explored the town in addition to meeting
with the key leadership staff at Central Christian Church.
"Lots of industry and factories have closed in Beloit," says
Craig Zastrow, executive pastor at Central. "They looked at
this depressed area and brought back the theme ‘Restore.’ That
theme—rebuilding the walls of our community—runs throughout
our new campus plan, including a ‘Nehemiah Prayer
Walk.’"
Other campuses tell
different stories. Crossroads Christian Church in Corona,
California, incorporates circles of light throughout its
property (Corona means "crown" in Spanish). Visioneering
designed Highland Meadows Christian Church near Grapevine,
Texas, with a central hallway—appropriately named Vine
Street—leading through rooms full of trellises, arbors, and
Texas craftsman-style touches. Kids worship at the "Hollywood
& Vine Studios."
One of the first
campuses Visioneering designed from scratch was The Crossing
in Las Vegas. "We proposed a ‘journey through the desert’
theme to reflect the idea of believers journeying together to
the promised land," says McGowan. "The central area became the
Court of Pillars. The Israelites followed God as he led them
with a pillar of cloud and a pillar of fire; visitors to The
Crossing see water misters during the day and brightly lit
torches after dark."
In addition to these
large design elements, Visioneering uses graphics and building
materials to further develop the theme. "The Crossing’s
buildings feature stucco, fabrics, and metal," McGowan says.
"The campus is well done, and built to last, but these
materials traditionally reflect an architecture of
impermanence—perfect for a church on a journey."
•
Form follows
finance—These materials also cost
less than many others—which makes them even more appealing.
Realizing that every church is on a budget, Visioneering
embraces cost-effective solutions throughout the design
process.
"A church doesn’t
have to spend more to tell its story," McGowan says. "Often,
the most effective elements are graphics, open spaces between
buildings, paint, or media."
As a result,
the designers and architects at Visioneering resist "warehouse
churches" from both a financial and creative
perspective.
"People think the
cheapest way to build a church is the ‘gymtorium’ with
classrooms built around the sides," McGowan says. "But even a
plain hallway costs $100 per square foot. In sunbelt climates
we can direct foot traffic outdoors, where brick pavement and
shade cost a fifth or tenth of that."
The strategy isn’t
limited to warm areas of the country. In Manchester, New
Hampshire, Visioneering multiplied the attractiveness of the
property by using the existing topography and landscaping to
create garden walls and other inexpensive features. They
redirected the saved money into graphics and flooring,
creating a New England lodge feel inside.
"We used the same
amount of money the church would put into a ‘vanilla’
building, but we directed the dollars into things that will
attract people," says McGowan.
•
Form follows feet—He’s quick to add that a church’s master plan must
also be pragmatic and user-friendly. "Churches shouldn’t be
surrounded by oceans of hard-to-access parking," he says.
"There should be shade, with separate paths for pedestrians
and vehicles.
"You can have a great
design, but you also have to ask yourself how a single mom
with two small children will get from her car to their
classrooms."
Routine Has Left the
Building
While Visioneering often works with megachurches,
McGowan commits a portion of money and time to assist smaller
churches with big dreams. And although it specializes in
working with churches from the beginning, Visioneering’s staff
also enjoys the challenge of adding value to unusual
in-process designs.
A team at West Ridge
Community Church, Elgin, Illinois, designed an unorthodox
master plan for their property including luxury townhomes,
commercial development, a café, and a House of Blues-style
worship venue. When the West Ridge team experienced problems
with the master plan, Visioneering provided design
consulting.
"The plan included a
100-foot-high water wall adjacent to the café, and we didn’t
have a clue how to make it work," says Darren Sloniger,
copastor at West Ridge and a real estate developer.
"Visioneering helped us solve the problem, and also flew here
from California when we had 24 hours to solve a major soil
problem on part of the land."
Whatever the project, the
Visioneering team believes strategic design can be "bait" in
the fishing of men. "We call it ‘destination architecture’
because we create place-based experiences," says McGowan. "But
it also refers to the impact we hope each place will have—to
influence people’s destination."
Jennifer Taylor, a contributing
editor to CHRISTIAN STANDARD, is director of project
integration with Church Development Fund, Irvine,
California. |