Temple Bat Yahm begins expansion
Alex Coolman
With a slice of a gold-handled shovel, Temple Bat Yahm broke ground
Sunday on a $5 million expansion project that will see construction of a
new library, administrative wing, classrooms, a sanctuary and other
facilities.
The 20,000-square-foot project, which is expected to be finished a year
from this fall, is aimed at preparing the temple to meet the demands of
its rising membership, said Rabbi Mark Miller.
“We will bequeath a legacy of pride and accomplishment to those who will
come after,” Miller said, speaking before a large crowd of families that
assembled at the temple for the event.
Temple Bat Yahm’s current facility was designed to handle 400 families,
said Lee Berman, president of the congregation.
But there are already 660 families who belong to the temple, and the
facility is bursting at the seams. Not only is there not enough room to
handle all the members, but some of the temple staff are crammed into
makeshift quarters in the library.
Berman said the temple expects to hold upward of 800 families within a
few years.
The expansion will take place on land that is now a parking lot and a
vacant yard, pushing the developed temple site close to the edge of
Jamboree Road.
Money for the ambitious project, Berman said, was generated by a
fund-raising effort among the temple’s members. Planning for the
expansion, in one form or another, has been in the works since the
formation of a long-range planning committe in 1992.
In addition to purely practical details such as providing temple staff
with office space, the development includes some facilities that are a
departure from the style of the temple.
Plans call, for example, for a small amphitheater near the back of the
property that can be used for outdoor events.
A ritual bath, or “mikvah,” will be constructed in what Miller
characterized as an gesture of inclusion toward more Orthodox currents in
Judaism.
“It’s reflective of my my desire to build bridges between all branches of
Judaism,” Miller said.
The presence of such a bath, which is used by both men and women for
“spiritual cleansing,” is common at Orthodox temples but unusual at a
reform temple such as Bat Yahm, Miller said.
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