At least this fine old building is being restored and re-used. I grew up Catholic (St. Johns, North Cambridge) and have a lot of respect and feelings for these old churches. I'm happy it's being restored and not torn down.There’s a great passage in All the Pretty Horses where a hacienda owner is talking about desacralizing a chapel on his property and the philosophical questions surrounding how and whether this can be done. I think we take for granted these adaptive reuses of churches but I imagine many people would not want to live in them, for many reasons.
Yes, I agree, particularly in this case. I don’t feel that way about all churches, though. This one is unique, and provides a good presence, not to mention being a visible landmark from all around.At least this fine old building is being restored and re-used. I grew up Catholic (St. Johns, North Cambridge) and have a lot of respect and feelings for these old churches. I'm happy it's being restored and not torn down.
My favorite church and church complex in North Cambridge is the former French/Canadian Notre-Dame de Pitié aka Our Lady of Pity. A magnificent local essay in Lombard Romanesque Revival that comes almost out of nowhere by even Cambridge urban standards but has a very European feel of placement. https://i0.wp.com/dbnews.americanan..._Rindge_Ave_North_Cambridge_Massachusetts.jpgYes, I agree, particularly in this case. I don’t feel that way about all churches, though. This one is unique, and provides a good presence, not to mention being a visible landmark from all around.
I grew up a couple of blocks from there, and always loved that church.My favorite church and church complex in North Cambridge is the former French/Canadian Notre-Dame de Pitié aka Our Lady of Pity. A magnificent local essay in Lombard Romanesque Revival that comes almost out of nowhere by even Cambridge urban standards but has a very European feel of placement. https://i0.wp.com/dbnews.americanan..._Rindge_Ave_North_Cambridge_Massachusetts.jpg