After attending an organ recital at the Fountain Street Church in Grand Rapids Michigan, I was delighted and surprised to find this beautiful building. If you ever get to visit this wonderful city, please be sure to stop in and meet the wonderful people of this fine institution. The following description is from their website.
Fountain Street Church was originally established in 1869 as a main-line Baptist Church. Over time, FSC developed a progressive theology through a succession of embattled, yet enlightened, Ministers. Today, visitors to FSC will discover a Romanesque building full of Byzantine art housed in a 21st Century liberal religious institution.
In 1917, a fire destroyed Fountain Street's original American Gothic Church building. The congregation voted to rebuild on the same site, but in a more authentic architectural style known as "Romanesque". Its present edifice was dedicated in February, 1924, and remains one of Grand Rapids' pre-eminent downtown institutions.
Among the art that pervades the entire Church building is an Italian Romanesque Narthex at the entrance to the Sanctuary replete with intricate mosaic medallions, a Mercer-tiled floor and an ornate coffered ceiling. Adjacent to the Narthex, visitors will find a Memorial Tower Room, which honors Kent County soldiers who died in WWI. It features a mosaic and gold-leaf domed ceiling, which portrays four guardian angels symbolizing Justice, Liberty, Peace, and Fraternity.
The majestic Sanctuary, with seating for approximately 1,500 people, features one of the largest and most dynamic organs in the Midwest. The Sanctuary's architecture reflects the beginnings of historic Christian Church design. During the 1920's and 1930's, Fountain Street's basilica served as the city's civic auditorium and as a forum for free discussion, because it was the largest inside gathering place in Grand Rapids. Its architectural features include a Roman arch, a timbered roof with ornamental Byzantine wood trusses, an Italian marble pulpit, and a massive baldacchino that rises high above the Chancel.
Prominent throughout the Sanctuary, you will find intricate mosaics, paintings, wood carvings, and stone sculptures. The crowning glory of FSC is its stained glass windows, representing on the east side the great teachers and poets of the Bible contrasted such great leaders as Plato, Da Vinci, Erasmus, Gallileo, Darwin, Paul, Luther, Roger Williams, Washington, Jefferson, and Lincoln. Throughout the Church, visitors will discover an abundance of artistic symbols - from diverse crosses to symbolic numbers, from sacred birds, animals, and foliage to bronze sconces and tiles on the floor.
The Rose Window at the rear of the church shines down on the magnificent organ trumpets
The gold-leaf ceiling is most impressive.
A view from the back of the church.
Coffered ceiling
Mercer-tiled floor
Organ console.
Iphone4 capture and Photoshop enhanced.
Copyright 2011, Jeffrey P. Hopp
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