First Church of Christ, Scientist (Minneapolis, Minnesota) explained

First Church of Christ, Scientist
Built:1897[1]
Architect:Septimus J. Bowler
Added:June 20, 1986
Refnum:86001340[2]
Designated Other1 Name:Minneapolis Landmark
Designated Other1 Abbr:MPLSL
Designated Other1 Color:
  1. A8BDEC
Designated Other1 Link:http://www.ci.minneapolis.mn.us/hpc/landmarks/hpc_landmarks_15th_st_e_614-20_first_church_of_christ_scientist
Designated Other1 Date:1986

The First Church of Christ, Scientist building in Minneapolis, Minnesota, was the first of its kind in the state.

Located at 614-620 15th Street East, in the residential neighborhood of Elliott Park, the church was once surrounded by Victorian homes. Minneapolis architect S. J. Bowler designed the building in the Doric order. The facade of the building featured a deep portico with two fluted columns holding up a pedimented gable.[1]

National Register listing

Recent history

The building was used for several years as a laboratory performance space by the Margolis Brown Adaptors Company under the name 'Physical Theatre Lab'. It had been empty since 2001, and began taking serious damage in the roof and on the brick exterior. The building racked up safety violations and in 2007 a local real estate broker attempted to sell the church to an owner who would fix it up.[3]

On January 28, 2012, the church was occupied temporarily by a group calling itself 'Minneapolis Space Liberation', as part of the larger Occupy movement. Approximately 50 people held the church for 45 minutes, during which time they had a dance party and food share. The action was conceived in solidarity with a building occupation in Oakland the same day, and to bring public attention to the many abandoned and neglected properties in the city.

The neighborhood came to know the building as both a nuisance, attracting vagrants and those looking to up their tagging game. But it was also championed as a potential restoration jewel in a city known to have torn down most of its historic buildings in the 1960s downtown rebuild.

Demolition

Eventually, Weidner Apartment Homes bought property that included the site. They argued that the building was beyond renovation and would harm the apartments on either side of it. They lobbied to demolish the site. The city rejected their proposal.

The conflict went to the Minnesota Court of Appeals, who ruled that the city was wrong to deny the demolition.[4] In August 2022, the building was razed.

History of congregation

In 1914 First Church of Christ, Scientist, built its second edifice at 24th and Nicollet. Designed by noted Minneapolis architect Harry Wild Jones, this building is now the Minneapolis First Seventh-day Adventist Church.[5] [6] [7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: First Church of Christ Scientist. City of Minneapolis. 2007-10-15.
  2. Web site: National Register of Historic Places. 2007-10-12. National Park Service.
  3. http://www.ackerberg.com/614/index.html Office: First Church of Christ Scientist - The Ackerberg Group
  4. https://www.americanexperiment.org/court-chastises-city-for-preventing-developer-from-razing-dilapidated-historic-building/
  5. http://www.ci.minneapolis.mn.us/council/2007-meetings/20071005/docs/03_724East26thStreet_Appeal_RPT.pdf Minneapolis City Council Minutes at page 6
  6. Ivey, Paul Eli, Prayers in Stone: Christian Science Architecture in the United States, 1894-1930, Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1999, p. 141,
  7. http://www.minneapolisfirst.org/ Minneapolis First Seventh-day Adventist Church website