Since it was built in 1924, Lyndale United Church of Christ has served as a spiritual home in south Minneapolis, but one that was becoming more difficult to care for.
While the church's lovely stained-glass windows and soaring sanctuary ceiling could inspire, its astronomical heating and maintenance bills had become a burden on the small congregation's modest budget. Three blocks away, the Salem English Lutheran Church had similar problems, as its back wall had bowed noticeably from the 1904 structure's foundation.
The pastors of both churches, Lyndale UCC's Don Portwood and Salem's Jen Nagel, began discussing their shared problem of maintaining aging and inefficient structures, the same sort of quandary many businesses face in a down economy. Eventually, Pastor Bob Brite, who presides over the barn-sized First Christian Church about a mile away, joined in the conversation.
Their solution, several years in the making, was novel, yet practical as well.
The churches worship in separate sanctuaries within one cost-effective and energy-efficient building, called the SpringHouse Ministry Center. Actually, it's the old Salem Lutheran church at W. 28th Street and Lyndale Avenue S., which underwent a $4.2 million renovation, thanks to an infusion of about $1.4 million from each congregation.
"It took a lot of holy imagination," Nagel said. "We didn't know where we were going or what would happen."
The churches' process embraced equal doses of faith and real estate savvy. The overall project resulted in 63 affordable apartments and retail shops in a lot just off Lyndale that was once part of the Salem complex. It was sold to help with the church renovation.
"It's interesting that these three congregations came together to rethink the way their individual congregations work," said Jeanne Halgren Kilde, a professor of religious studies at the University of Minnesota. "You can create stronger bonds through a close spatial partnership. ... There have always been congregations that would help each other out in times of crisis, but this seems much more permanent."