R
Ridgerunner
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Agreed. Here is a link with some photos. facebook.com/shrinepilgrimagesThe OLAM Shrine built for Mother Angelica in Hanceville, AL is modern (within the past 20 years) but highly ornate. At least it looks to be so on tv.![]()
I don’t know who the architect was, but here are some “modern” architects who use modified traditional themes and modern materials. They have, very recently, done some beautiful work. It’s worthwhile to look at these sites and see some of the truly beautiful things they have done. It’s also important, in look at them, to realize they don’t “copy old churches”. They reinvigorate traditional themes to achieve the kind of beauty some of the older churches had, but in a new and different way.
stroik.com/portfolio/
hmenzies.com/work.html
Mr. Stroik, who is head of the Department of ARchitecture at Notre Dame has written about certain “myths” that have caused American church architecture to go ugly. As to the “costs too much” myth, he said:
Myth: “We can’t afford to build beautiful churches today. The Church doesn’t have the money it had in the past.
In fact, Roman Catholics are the wealthiest denomination in the country today. We have more CEO’s and civic leaders than any other religious group. We have never been wealthier, yet we have never built such cheap churches. This reflects American giving priorities; from 1968 to 1995 the portion of personal income members gave to the Church dropped 21 percent. The people of God need to be encouraged to generously support the construction of houses of prayer. Bishops and dioceses should be encouraged to promote the highest quality rather than placing a cap on construction costs. The faithful should be willing to spend more on the house of God than on their own houses and build with a quality exceeding other public buildings. One story of great philanthropy concerns Holy Spirit Church in Atlanta which received a generous sum of money from a few of its parishioners enabling them to build a very elegant substantial brick Romanesque church in the early 1990’s. Other parishes, in order to build a worthy and beautiful church, have taken the time to raise substantial budgets or have chosen to build in phases.”