Jonathan’s Ride to Church(es) in Salt Lake City

I was inspired by Andy’s post of churches around York several weeks back and decided to give it a shot where I live here in the Salt Lake area.   I had visited some of the churches in the area before, and decided to use that as a starting point to visit many of the others for this post.   So not all of them were obtained on a single Sunday, but I decided it was OK to cheat a little and include as many of the significant religious buildings in the downtown core as I could get.   So here they are.

Obviously there are many LDS buildings, and Salt Lake has many diverse designs of LDS meetinghouses.   Additionally, many other religious faiths are represented, and display, arguably, the most impressive religious architecture of the city.   I have also included a map showing the locations of each of the buildings.   While some of these I have already researched a great deal at my Salt Lake architecture blog, others I know very little about at this point in time.   Others, like the Garden Park ward, had signs posted stating the days pictures could be taken.   Unfortunately Sunday was not one of the permitted photo days.   So I don’t have any yet.   (If I recall correctly, I need to go back on a Monday, Tuesday, or Saturday to get pictures.)

Another area of research I have been working on involves identifying great LDS architecture with a focus on meetinghouses.   My belief is that the greatest architectural legacy of the LDS church is in the meetinghouse designs.   As I discover new buildings, I will be posting pictures and drawings and research of them one at a time on a near-daily basis.   If you are interested in unusual, and little-known great LDS architecture, feel free to stop by at http://ldsarchitecture.wordpress.com.

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Click here to see a map of the buildings included in the slide show (red markers are religious buildings)

Notes for several of the buildings:
The ward member who designed the Forest Dale Chapel murdered a man whom he owed money to during construction of the building.   The ward was split into those who felt he was innocent and those who felt he was guilty.   The trial included death threats against the defense team, and finally a guilty verdict and execution of the architect.   A new architect was chosen who completely redesigned the building that is standing today.

St Marks Episcopal Cathedral was designed by the founder of the American Institute of Architects, Richard Upjohn.   The structure is Utah’s oldest non-LDS church in continuous use.   The 10th Bishop of this beautiful cathedral was Carolyn Tanner Irish, only the fourth woman in the Episcopal Church to hold that office.   Carolyn was raised in the LDS Church as the daughter of well-known philanthropist O.C. Tanner.   She retired as Bishop on 06 Nov 2010.

The 5th Ward LDS chapel has also served as a flood shelter, photo studio, architect and real estate offices, home residence and rentals, escort services, goth/industrial night clubs, and is now a Tibetan Buddhist temple.

The 18th Ward LDS Chapel was deconstructed and moved onto Capitol Hill adjacent to the Utah State Capitol where it now serves as a non-denominational memorial chapel and reception hall.