Experiencing the Spiritual for Tour Day 2025

Author

Michele Racioppi

Affiliation

°®¶¹app staff

Tags

Tour Day, Places of Worship
Image details

°®¶¹app chapters, friend groups, and partners organized over 35 unique tours and events across the country for Tour Day 2025 - the most tours we have had in recent years! 

Many tours focused on the annual theme of Places of Worship. °®¶¹app chapters and partners organized tours to local and sometimes hard-to-get-into gems, including the Mount Angel Abbey, a Benedictine monastery south of Portland, OR, with a library by Alvar Aalto, two churches by Charles Stade in the Chicago suburbs, five exceptional sacred spaces in Las Vegas, and the °®¶¹app/Minnesota chapter went above and beyond, organizing a full month of programming around the theme.  

We would especially like to thank the many sacred spaces that opened their doors for Tour Day participants, include St. Peter's in New York City, Fish Church in Stamford, CT, Beth Sholom Synagogue in Elkins Park, PA, and the Cedar Lane Universal Unitarian Church in Bethesda, MD.

We also had many "returning" tours lead by partners that we are happy to work with year after year to provide access to some amazing Modern sites, including Schweikher House, Histoury, Beinecke Library, Yamasaki in Detroit, Modernism Week, and Midcentury Modern Midland, among others.

Thank you again to all of the host organizations and tour leaders who participated and made this another great Tour Day! Continue reading for some highlights from this year's events.


Cedar Lane Past, Present, and Future

On October 24, Cedar Lane Unitarian Universalist Congregation and Rentals at Cedar Lane hosted a one-of-a-kind architectural tour celebrating the rich history and renewed vitality of their 6+ acre campus in Bethesda, Maryland. Speakers Mary Means and Gwen Wright guided more than 30 participants through Montgomery County’s mid-century modern legacy, exploring the planning, preservation, and loss of significant buildings across the region.

The tour then focused on Cedar Lane’s own transformation since its original construction in 1958. Guests moved through the building to experience the original architectural vision, the challenges and successes of its renovation, and the beautifully revitalized spaces that now support our growing venue rentals program for the broader DMV. Over cocktails and appetizers, participants viewed archival materials, including original designs, historic photos, architectural drawings and awards, and original furnishings — offering a powerful window into the building’s past and present.

 


°®¶¹app/Chicago Tour Day Events

The Chicago chapter hosted two events for Tour Day, "Virtual: Chicagoland Modern Houses of Worship," and "Suburban Sacred Spaces: Des Plaines."

The virtual presentation explored ten different modern houses of worship throughout the Chicagoland region. The in-person tour in suburban Des Plaines included two modern churches designed by noted religious architect Charles Stade, and an elaborate 1972 cemetery building by Harley Ellis Devereaux, a Detroit firm that specialized in mausoleum design. The high point of the tour was a visit to a 1959 convent designed for a community of religious sisters. Although the sisters are cloistered and limit interaction with the outside world, their invitation to visit several rooms in the convent offered a moving and otherworldly experience.

Special thanks to Bob from Immanuel Lutheran for a fascinating behind-the-scenes tour of every last inch of the church, and especially to the Carmelite sisters for their generosity and kindness.


Tour of National Presbyterian Church with °®¶¹app/DC 

On October 11, 2025, as part of the °®¶¹app Tour Day theme “Places of Worship,” the DC chapter hosted a captivating tour at the National Presbyterian Church. Designed by Harold E. Wagoner and completed in 1967, this striking modern-Gothic building was brought to life through a thoughtful talk by Diane Stewart (retired Facilities Director) and Jennie Gwin (Partner, Beyer Blinder Belle), who traced its architectural lineage and recent restoration. Participants explored the campus — including a marble courtyard with engraved scripture, an intimate chapel, and the soaring main sanctuary — while marveling at the abstract faceted stained-glass windows crafted by Marguerite Gaudin. Throughout the tour, it became clear how historic design decisions continue to inform the church’s use today, and how careful interventions have preserved its mid-century character while enhancing accessibility and community life. It was a powerful reminder of the living legacy of modern sacred architecture.


°®¶¹app/MN and Twin Cities Sacred Spaces

°®¶¹app/MN members and followers enjoyed a month of Places of Worship programming, kicked off with Tour Day visits to four different, but highly recognizable, examples of modern religious architecture. The tour began in Minneapolis at the Trinity Lutheran Church of Minnehaha Falls (1959-61) by Sovik, Mathre & Associates, then to St. Paul to tour St. Columba Catholic Church (1948-50) by Barry Bryne and Mount Zion Temple (1952-54) by Erich Mendelsohn. The tour culminated at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, New Brighton (1967-68) by Shifflet, Hutchison & Associates, with liturgical consultant Frank Kacmarcik. The day ended with an abstract lecture by Mary Dahlman Smith with a preview of her research on Kacmarcik.

The month of October continued with a virtual lecture by Dahlman Smith, “Liturgy & Modernism: Frank Kacmarcik’s influence in Minnesota,” on October 16. Board member Bobak Ha’Eri presented “Modernist Monuments: Minneapolis Post-War Places of Worship,” on October 27 at the First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis, an event in collaboration with Preserve Minneapolis. The month was rounded out by “Brick by Brick: Fixing Saarinen's Towers,” a talk by two historic architects Angela Wolf Scott and Louis Joyner, hosted at Christ Church Lutheran, Minneapolis. 

Many thanks to all attendees and especially to the hosts, speakers, tour guides, and collaborators.


Las Vegas Sacred Spaces: A Walking Tour of Postwar Places of Worship

On a sunny morning in October, thirty five guests joined Nevada Preservation Foundation on a Sacred Spaces walking tour to explore five exceptional mid twentieth century places of worship in Las Vegas. The tour highlighted how these buildings served as community anchors and inspiring “third places” while also facing modern challenges of maintenance, reuse, and relevancy. Three sites demonstrated adaptive reuse, with new congregations preserving original architectural features. Led by architectural historian Olivia White and local historian Allan Rogers, the group visited Saint Annes Catholic Church, Trinity Life Center, Christ Church Episcopal, Benevolence Temple, and Debre Birhan Holy Trinity Church. The morning concluded with a relaxed lunch that gave people time to reflect on what they had experienced, connect with one another, and consider the importance of preserving these sacred spaces.


Everything Aalto at Mount Angel Abbey Library

Mount Angel Abbey, a Benedictine monastery perched above the Willamette River Valley about an hour south of Portland, hosted °®¶¹app/Oregon for a tour of its library - one of only two buildings in the United States designed by Alvar Aalto. The surprisingly compact building makes impressive use of form, materials, and daylighting, and it was enjoyable for the group to explore the light-filled space on a dreary Oregon fall day. The library's curator of manuscripts, Brother Albert, entertained tour goers with a presentation of illuminated medieval manuscripts from the library's collection. The library's minimalist interior was an effective setting for the dense, vividly colored manuscript pages that were shared. The tour wrapped up with a round of beers at the abbey's own on-site brewery.


St. Procopius Abbey by Architect Ed Dart

The Schweikher House organized a tour of Ed Dart's St. Procopius Abbey in Lisle, Illinois as part of °®¶¹app Tour Day - Places of Worship. Considered a master work, St. Procopius features Chicago common brick, stunning light play and thoughtful flow of movement through irregular and complex spaces. Designed in 1967 and completed in 1970, Dart's design in partnership with Abbey leadership remains a powerful space of reflection and spirituality.

 


Open House of Saint Peter's Church

The Arts and Architecture Conservancy at Saint Peter’s was pleased to open its doors and invite people to learn more about Saint Peter’s Church: its history, current programming, and how it is looking to the future. An open format allowed people to explore two art galleries, Nevelson Chapel, and the Vignelli-designed sanctuary at their own pace, some experiencing this modernist gem for the first time. Visitors found markers throughout to note significant objects and lead them to more details in our digital guide. Offered through the Bloomberg Philanthropies Art + Culture App, allows for anyone to take a tour through our space at anytime or from anywhere.