Building a place for spiritual community
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Michele Marr
As long ago as 1987, when Peter Haynes interviewed to become rector of
St. Michael and All Angels, members of the Corona del Mar congregation
told him the church needed Sunday school classrooms.
Fourteen years later, on March 25, Haynes helped parish members
celebrate the completion of their new parish center for the first time. A
grand opening celebration will be held next weekend during Easter
festivities.
“We now have beautiful classrooms,” said Teri Corbet, minister of
religious education. “We met in them for the first time last week.”
From the time the congregation formed in 1959, until its sanctuary on
Pacific View Drive was completed in 1968, worshipers met in various
rented rooms. A church office and a small parish hall were built
kitty-cornered to the sanctuary in 1976.
For Sunday school, kids assembled in “one long alcove, an open area
with a lot tables,” Corbet explained. “We put our group of little ones at
little tables in the same room as our teenagers.”
Acoustics and cramped space made it difficult to teach from more than
one lesson plan at a time and, Corbet lamented, “You just can’t have one
lesson that works for both a 3-year-old and a 10-year-old.”
The congregation’s steady growth continued to make a difficult
situation worse.
“And, while our parish membership increased by 5% last year,” Senior
Warden John Turner spelled out, “our church school population increased
by 30%.”
Like other thriving coastal county churches and synagogues in recent
years -- including Temple Bat Yahm, Presbyterian Church of the Covenant,
Mariners Church and Our Lady Queen of Angels -- St. Michael and All
Angels faced the challenge of expanding its campus in a county where
construction costs run high and real estate is expensive and scarce.
The parish was fortunate to have enough property to spread out on. To
help them develop a feasible building plan they hired Rengel & Co.
Architects of Tustin and asked consultants at Holliman & Associates in
Harrisburg, Penn., to provide them with a feasibility study.
In the fall of 1999, the 598-member parish began the quest to raise
$950,000: the estimated costs for an 8600 square foot expansion project
dubbed “Building Our Faith.”
“Virtually every member of the parish contributed,” said Turner, who
chaired the capital campaign. By January of 2000, members had put close
to $1.1 million into the building fund.
Ware & Malcomb Architects, Inc. of Irvine joined the project to help
develop the interior. The parish, then the city, approved the final
plans.
On the last Sunday in August, Haynes stood with his congregation as
they broke ground for the structure that soon would provide them with
classrooms, a nursery, a youth chapel and much, much more.
Scarcely seven months later, parish members have a new parish center.
Classrooms are color-coded -- the doors are blue, red, yellow --
rather than numbered to make it easy for children of all ages to find
their rooms.
With assigned rooms and somewhere to leave materials, teachers can now
use lesson plans with projects that extend over more than one Sunday.
“And, we can get noisy!” Corbet adds. “The kids are tickled pink.”
The nursery is lively with primary colors and four times larger than
the one it replaced.
“Parents were delighted. There were many ‘oohs’ and ‘aahs’ when the
doors opened,” beamed Kim Turner, herself the mother of three
preschoolers. “You should have seen the size of the old room.”
In addition to the long-awaited classrooms and nursery, the new center
houses a half dozen other much-needed facilities. Spacious administration
offices give staff the elbowroom they have never had, and room to grow.
Meeting rooms are available to the parish’s many programs. A large room,
now christened “chill room” by an improvised butcher paper and marker
sign, is a gathering place for teens.
An informal coffee and lunch room opens onto the church’s courtyard
and barbecue, making after-worship refreshments easier to serve. An
enormous hall, designed to double as both basketball and volleyball
courts, adjoins a commercially equipped kitchen. A large pass-through
window makes the hall a place to hold banquets and other gala events.
“We expect these new facilities to become a resource for the
community, too,” Haynes said. “In time, they will be available for group
meetings, sports leagues and youth groups.”
Residents of the local community are invited to be special guests of
the church on April 15, when it hosts festivities, including a tour of
the new Parish Center, following both the 8 and 10 a.m. worship services.
The Rt. Rev. Robert M. Anderson, assistant bishop in the Episcopal
diocese of Los Angeles, will visit the parish and will perform the 10
a.m. communion.
Refreshments befitting the occasion will be served after each service
and an Easter egg hunt featuring nonperishable eggs will be held in the
Parish Center at 11:30 a.m.
The congregation will complete its threefold sequence of celebration
on St. Michael’s Day, Sept. 30, in honor of their patron saint. The
center will then be blessed and dedicated by a bishop from the Diocese of
Los Angeles.
“It is now our great responsibility to use this beautiful new building
to reach out to our community,” Turner said, “and to do the work God
wants us to do.”
FYI
What: Easter Celebration of New Parish Center
When: 8 and 10 a.m. April 15 Where: St. Michael and All Angels, 3233 Pacific View Drive, at
Marguerite, Corona del Mar
Phone: (949) 644-0463
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