St. Mary's Catholic Church - Aspen, CO, USA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Outspoken1
N 39° 11.413 W 106° 49.025
13S E 343072 N 4339457
This community church is undergoing another large renovation, so I could not go inside.
Waymark Code: WMYFCJ
Location: Colorado, United States
Date Posted: 06/09/2018
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Math Teacher
Views: 0

The plaque reads:

ORIGINAL CHURCH FOUNDATION STONE

Parish established July 3, 1881
Original church erected 1883
(approximately 50 feet west -
at the time named St. Stephen's)
Rectory built July 1888
Existing church (renamed St. Mary's)
Dedicated March 13, 1892
Upstairs church restoration completed June 1988
Elevator & front addition dedicated February 16, 1994
Elevator in memory of Mary Ann M****hon

"Saint Mary’s was founded during Aspen’s earliest years when this community was but a small mining camp carving a future out of a remote and unforgiving wilderness. The parish were men and women possessed of indomitable spirits: the missionary priests who wandered the west, the tough miners and their families, and the adventurers who came to make their fortune. Many settlers amassed and then lost overnight great wealth, other’s lives ended in an early death in the mines or at the hands of the harsh climate. Our history stretches back to July 3, 1881 when the very first Mass ever offered in this valley was celebrated by Father Harney in the Aspen Times building and attended by a small gathering of Aspen’s earliest miners and settlers." (from (visit link) )

"Aspen’s Catholic church finds its spirit during renovation by Carolyn Sackariason, March 17, 2018

St. Mary Church is three months and $300,000 away from having its parish put back together after an extensive renovation of the 125-year-old building.

After nearly a year of holding masses off site, parishioners returned to St. Mary on March 11 to attend services, albeit in a temporary location in one of the classrooms on the church's ground floor. Two of the three masses were standing room only, Rev. John Hilton said.

"We've been at the Methodist church for the last nine months," he said, adding that the Aspen Community Church has been great in accommodating St. Mary's congregation. "They like it over there but this is home."

The upstairs sanctuary is still under construction and is expected to be completed mid-June. Standing in front of where the altar would be and under an A-frame of scaffolding on the church's second floor, Hilton beamed with gratitude and hope for the future.

"This is exciting to me," he said of the sanctuary space. "The whole goal is when a person walks in for the first time, they would never know it was renovated."

The sanctuary's floor will return to wood, the arch above the altar is being reshaped, the pews are being restored in upstate New York and the stained-glass windows are being meticulously redone in Carbondale.
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As one of the oldest buildings in the downtown core, this is the first time St. Mary has been stripped down to her core. There have been remodels over the years but not a full-fledged gutting, Hilton said of the $7 million project that was paid for through a fundraising campaign.

"We are taking the building apart," he said. "It's like the layers of an onion."

Crews went into the attic last summer with Hazmat suits on. They were met with layers of ungodly things: coal dust, dead rats, mice, bat droppings.

There's no insulation in the exterior walls — it's brick-to-brick. The ceiling on the third floor was sagging about eight inches.

"It could have lasted another 100 years or it could have collapsed tomorrow," Hilton said. "When you really look closely, it needed to be done."

Local firm Charles Cunniffe Architects is heading up the project, with specialists coming in where needed. On the third level of the church (one level above the sanctuary), the coffered ceiling is being painted by New York City-based Evergreen Architectural Arts.

"Here we are being very careful to keep everything historic," Hilton said while standing above the sanctuary.

The city's historic preservation commission has given the project its blessing. Amy Simon, Aspen's historic preservation officer, has been working closely with the church.

Hilton said he has appreciated her guidance.

"She's been a real friend to us," he said.

The renovation is giving the church a slight increase in square footage because it is opening areas that were walled off before. The entrance is more open, with a coffee bar and a hallway that leads people to a reception area.

"We wanted to make it warm and welcoming when you come in the door," Hilton said.

Multiple layers of paint on the first floor's original windows from 1892 have been stripped, and will blend in with the historic elements of the building, along with other materials being used.

The classrooms have been remodeled and the old apartments facing the lawn between the church and the rectory have been turned into offices.

The church had originally planned to expand by several thousand square feet with a social hall that would've extended onto the lawn and added space in the basement. But the cost — both in price and community goodwill — was too great to push it forward. The church does have approval for a parish expansion if the congregation chooses to do it in the future, Hilton said.

"We didn't have community buy-in," he said, adding that many community members appreciate the lawn. "You have to think about what's good for the parish, or what's good for the community." " (from (visit link) )
Type of Church: Church

Status of Building: Actively in use for worship

Date of organization: 07/03/1881

Date of building construction: 03/13/1892

Archdiocese: Denver

Diocese: Denver

Address/Location:
533 E Main St.
Aspen, CO USA


Relvant Web Site: [Web Link]

Dominant Architectural Style: Not listed

Associated Shrines, Art, etc.: Not listed

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