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The Denver Colorado Temple has a total of 29,117 square feet (2,705 m 2), four ordinance rooms, and six sealing rooms. In 2016 a second temple in Colorado, the Fort Collins Colorado Temple, was completed. [3] In 1997 the temple was celebrated as part of the 100th-anniversary celebration of the LDS Church in Colorado. [4]
The temple currently has a building loan of $2.25 million requiring a monthly mortgage payment of $13,600. The temple seeks to build a building fund of $200,000. [13] which will allow the temple to refinance and significantly reduce the monthly payment. The temple still needs to construct a kitchen for the food distribution.
The temple is located in Denver's North Capitol Hill neighborhood. Pathways Church acquired the building from the City of Denver in 2005. Pathways Church held services at the building and also ran it as a separate business, the Temple Events Center, until 2013. In 2013 the building and property was sold to Denver Community Church.
The Denver Colorado Temple in Centennial was completed in 1986. [ 8 ] The Fort Collins Colorado Temple was formally dedicated by Dieter F. Uchtdorf on October 16, 2016.
The City and County of Denver has a formal historic designation program that establishes Denver landmarks. These are designated by ordinances of Denver's city council. [ 1 ] The first three sites so designated, on January 10, 1968, are the Emmanuel/Sherith Chapel , Constitution Hall (site) (destroyed by fire in 1977), and the Governor's Mansion .
Architect Leon Coquard of Detroit designed the cathedral in the French Gothic style. [5] Its character is influenced by the 13th-century Saint Nicholas Collegiate church (collégiale Saint-Nicolas) of Munster, Moselle, France, which is the birthplace of Bishop Nicholas Chrysostom Matz, who supervised cathedral construction.
The Mosque of the El Jebel Shrine, which has also been known as the Rocky Mountain Consistory, and as the Scottish Rite Temple is a historic building in the North Capitol Hill neighborhood of downtown Denver. [2] It was for a period known as Sherman Street Event Center [3]
Entry arch of the Masonic Temple Building in Denver, Colorado. The Masonic Temple Building in Denver, Colorado is a Richardsonian Romanesque style building from 1889, designed by Frank E. Edbrooke. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. [1] The wealth of the Masons in Denver is evident in the fact that no expense was ...