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Builders Speak Out on Church Construction
Check these trends before drawing up your building plans
Jennifer Schuchmann | posted 3/01/2000
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If you are planning to construct a new church building or remodel your existing
one, you're in good company. This year, churches in the United States will spend
an estimated $8 billion on new facilities. Before finalizing construction plans,
though, you may want to read what builders we consulted are saying about trends
in the business.
The builders include Jim
Avery, vice president of sales and marketing for Sprung Instant Structures,
Calgary, Alberta; Bill Couchenour, president of Cogun Industries, North Lima,
Ohio; Sam Harmon, president of S.R. Harmon Construction, Warners, New York;
Tom Lundberg, president of GuideOne Taylor Ball Construction, West Des Moines,
Iowa; Bob Lunn, director of operations for Barden Commercial Division, Middleport,
New York; Paul Marston, president of Richmond Sterling, Atlanta, Georgia; Wayne
Nowlan of Allied Design Architectural and Engineering Group, PC, which provides
professional design services for Morton Buildings, Morton, Illinois; and Mark
West, business development manager for Century Builders, Houston, Texas.
Trend
One: Maximize What You Have
Because of the high cost
of new construction, many churches are looking for ways to stretch their existing
buildings to meet needs. "The battle to maximize square footage for the budget,
while maintaining design integrity, is intensifying with the rising costs of
property, construction, and operations," Couchenour says.
Some churches are looking
for ways to free up space for more high-priority usage. For example, churches
that are building a drama ministry need space in which to store sets and props.
Since many of these items are seasonal, churches are finding ways to store them
off site.
Trend
Two: Plan for Growth
Churches that are looking
for property on which to build should choose something spacious enough to accommodate
current programs, parking, and people's expectations for more spacious facilities.
"In the past, church facilities were smaller. Now people must have more seating
and more classroom space," Harmon says. "They're no longer content to meet in
the choir room for Sunday school; they want a different classroom for each class."
Churches should also plan
for expansion, builders say. "Even if you're not going to build all at once,
you've got to do a master plan that lays out the campus with space for the future,"
West says. Until about five years ago, only large churches did this, he says.
Now every church has to do it.
"Clearly, the predominate
trend we are seeing in the church environment today is one of growth," Lundberg
adds. "This requires churches to establish master plans and construction programs
that facilitate expansion."
For example, the walking
distance between parking lots and church buildings must be factored into that
plan. "In Houston, you don't want people to walk a half-mile in 100-degree weather,"
West says. Likewise, a half-mile of braving ice and snow in the Midwest is hardly
tolerable on the way to Sunday morning worship.
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