The building once home to the Science Museum of Minnesota is now the largest Church of Scientology in the Midwest.
Brightly lit multimedia displays and books touting the beliefs of the controversial religion have replaced the museum's dinosaur collection at the three-level, 82,000-square-foot building next to St. Paul's famed Fitzgerald Theater. The facility opened to the public over the weekend.
Scientologists say the space -- known as an "Ideal Organization" -- was built to accommodate the growing number of Scientologists in Minnesota and four bordering states. They estimate 10,000 Scientologists in the five-state area, an increase from about 3,600 five years ago.
Despite its share of critics and skeptics, the religion founded by science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard has continued to grow since its first church opened in California in 1954. Scientologists adamantly defend it against those labeling the group a cult or sham.
"We're definitely a religion," said Erin Banks, a spokeswoman for the Church of Scientology. "We have a congregation, we do Sunday services ... weddings. We believe you are a spirit. You have a mind and you have a body, but you yourself are a spirit."
The new center serves Scientology's mission, she said. "It's an applied religious philosophy. ... It is about what you come and learn here, you take it with you and apply it, share it with others, make your life better, make the lives of others better."
Center among 60 worldwide
The Church of Scientology Twin Cities is the newest of dozens of "Ideal Organizations" opened in the past five years. It's the fourth to open in 2011, joining locations in Tampa, Fla., Melbourne, Australia, and Moscow. Some 60 "Ideal Org" sites worldwide are planned.