6 McMillan Avenue
Red Deer
Alberta
Canada
Douglas Cardinal 1969
Described by Arran Timms (Sacred Spaces, in AlbertaViews magazine, Nov/Dec 2001) as a design that 'that far and away predates Frank Gehry's contemporary, titanium-clad sculptural musings at Bilbao', this brick-clad building stands in the bland suburbs of a small prairie city, and provides an astonishingly graceful contrast. The entire structure - the walls, the roofline, even the roof itself - is curved. The arcs of the long west wall, the vertical curves of the bell tower, the rounded towers of the confessionals, everything about the building seems organic and melded to the prairie landscape and its tall skies.
Inside, the church is built in the round and the exposed brick is largely unadorned. The floor slopes irresistibly toward the altar and the pulpit, and both are illuminated by a pair of deep skylights that seem to be natural extrusions of the ceiling, which itself echoes the slope of the floor. The ceiling is supported only by a row of narrow columns toward the back of the church. Almost every element inside the church reinforces the sinuous exterior of the building and no doubt contributes to its quiet ambience and remarkable acoustics.
The church is an early work by Canadian architect Douglas Cardinal, who rejected a controversial addition to the church made in 1995. A native Canadian Metis, Cardinal is probably best known for the Museum of Civilization in Ottawa.
Belle posted some great pictures of interesting church designs from around the world. I am lucky enough to live very close to one of the most interesting. Our nation that doesn't have much of this kind of architecture, especially away from the major population centers.
2 comments:
What a beautiful church. I love the inside also. We don't have many pretty churches in Kelowna.
Beautiful! There's a round church in Winnipeg too, with a corkscrew-like roof that is meant to evoke a teepee. I believe the architect is Etienne Gabourie, if memory serves.
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