Los Angeles California Temple

Los Angeles California Temple

The Los Angeles California Temple (formerly the Los Angeles Temple), the tenth operating and the second-largest temple operated by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, is on Santa Monica Boulevard in the Westwood district of Los Angeles, California. When it was dedicated in 1956, it was the largest temple of the church, later surpassed by the Salt Lake Temple with its additions and annexations. The grounds includes a visitors' center open to the public, the "Los Angeles Regional Family History Center", also open to the public, and the headquarters for the Los Angeles mission.

History

The Los Angeles Temple was announced when the church purchased 24.23 acres (98,000 m²) from the "Harold Lloyd Motion Picture Company" on March 23, 1937, by president Heber J. Grant. Construction was to have begun soon thereafter, but financial difficulties relating to the Great Depression and World War II delayed the groundbreaking until 1951.

The temple plans were revised at this time to include a priesthood assembly room, previously absent from temples built after the Salt Lake Temple, and generally absent still. It was also expanded to accommodate an unprecedented 300 patrons per session.

This was the first temple with an angel Moroni statue since the Salt Lake Temple. When the statue was installed, it faced southeast as the temple does. It was later turned to face due east at the request of then Church President David O. McKay.

This was the last temple designed to use live-actors instead of a film to present the endowment. The motion-picture presentation soon replaced the live-actor presentation, and the progressive presentation (in which patrons moved from one room to another) was replaced with stationary ordinance rooms (i.e., patrons remained in a single room for the entire ceremony). In 2003, the temple reverted to a progressive-style presentation of the endowment (but still using a movie) and completely renovated the terrestrial room.

The Los Angeles California Temple was closed for renovations in late November of 2005, with reopening originally scheduled for May 2006 but was delayed and didn't open until July 11, 2006. [cite press release | last = Olsen | first = Abbey | title = Los Angeles Temple to Reopen | publisher = The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints | url=http://www.lds.org/library/display/0,4945,40-1-3474-5,00.html | accessdate = 2007-07-12 ).] The renovation also included a seismic overhaul and a complete redesign and reconstruction of the baptistry, which had long been plagued by mold due to poor ventilation. ["Los Angeles California Temple". www.mormonchurchtemples.com]

etting

Located at 10777 W. Santa Monica Boulevard in the Westwood district of Los Angeles, California, the temple sits atop a small hill above the intersection of Overland Avenue and Santa Monica Boulevard.

The well manicured grounds, open to the public, are filled with a various plants, including Canary Island Pine trees, several varieties of palm trees, Bird of Paradise trees, olive trees, and rare Chinese Ginkgo trees. At the left and right of the temple are two fountains, and at the front is a large reflection pool. Several family-themed statues further beautify the grounds. In December temple grounds are all aglow with thousands of multi-colored lights in celebration of Christmas.

While not as regionally prominent as the temples in Oakland, San Diego, and Washington, the Los Angeles California Temple is still one of the most distinctive features of Los Angeles' Westside. Thousands of commuters pass it every day on busy Santa Monica Boulevard. The proliferation of high-rise buildings along the Wilshire Boulevard corridor and in nearby Century City has reduced its prominence in the Westside skyline. However, its dramatic night lighting and sheer size still make an imposing sight, particularly for travelers exiting the Santa Monica Freeway northbound on Overland.

Numerous Church facilities are on its grounds including a meetinghouse, a baseball field, the headquarters of the Church's California Los Angeles Mission, and apartments (used by missionaries, temple workers, temple patrons, and visiting church officials).

The remaining land, along Manning Avenue, was subdivided for residential lots, the sale of which considerably offset the expense of constructing the temple. Because it was the church's first temple (save the roughly contemporaneous Bern Switzerland Temple) built outside of an LDS-dominated settlement, the Los Angeles Temple was the first LDS temple explicitly designed for automobile accessibility: its parking facilities were larger than those of any temple built previously, and there is no direct pedestrian connection between the front doors and Santa Monica Boulevard.

Architecture

The temple's architecture is generally Modernist, an aesthetic that extends to the choice of exterior cladding: 146,000 square feet (14,000 m²) of Mo-Sai pre-cast concrete facing, a mixture of crushed quartz and white Portland cement quarried in Utah and Nevada. The very light brown pigmentation of the Mo-Sai blend has the advantage of concealing the thin layer of soot that accumulates on most buildings in Los Angeles. The temple is 369 feet (112 m) long, 269 feet (82 m) wide and has an overall height of 257 feet (78 m). Atop the temple sits a 15 foot (5 m) tall statue of the angel Moroni.

The rooms include a baptistry, celestial room, four ordinance rooms, ten sealing rooms, and an assembly room that stretches the entire length of the temple. The Los Angeles temple features murals on the walls of its progressive-style ordinance rooms including the celestial room. The only other temple with celestial room murals is the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple.

References

ee also

* Temple (Latter Day Saints)
* List of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
* List of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by geographic region
* Comparison of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
* Temple architecture (Latter-day Saints)

External links

* [http://www.lds.org/placestovisit/location/0,10634,1786-1-1-1,00.html Los Angeles California Temple Visitors' Center web page]
* [http://www.larfhc.org Los Angeles Regional Family History Center (LARFHC)]
* [http://www.ldschurchtemples.com/losangeles/ Los Angeles California Temple page]
* [http://www.losangelesmormontemple.org Los Angeles Temple]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Los Angeles, California — Infobox Settlement name = Los Angeles settlement type = City official name = City of Los Angeles nickname = L.A., The City of Angels, The Big Orange, The Entertainment Capital of the World website = [http://www.lacity.org/ lacity.org] image… …   Wikipedia

  • Westwood, Los Angeles, California — Westwood is a district in western Los Angeles, California, United States. Westwood is best known as the home of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). The eastern portions of the district are often thought of as a distinctly different… …   Wikipedia

  • Los Angeles, California — Los Angeles Pour les articles homonymes, voir Los Angeles (homonymie). Los Angeles …   Wikipédia en Français

  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Los Angeles, California — For places listed on the National Register in the rest of Los Angeles County, see National Register of Historic Places listings in Los Angeles County, California. Map of all coordinates from Google Map of all coordinates from Bing …   Wikipedia

  • Los Angeles (Kalifornien) — Los Angeles Spitzname: City of Angels, L.A., Horizontal City Skyline von Los Angeles …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Los Angeles — Spitzname: City of Angels, L.A., Gang Capital of the Nation, Horizontal City Skyline von Los Angeles (Downtown LA) …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chinatown, Los Angeles, California — Chinatown in Los Angeles, California (zh cp|c=洛杉磯唐人街|p=luò shān jī táng rén jiē) is a Chinatown in Downtown Los Angeles that was founded in the late 1800s. It was originally located less than a mile from its current location where Union Station… …   Wikipedia

  • Little Tokyo, Los Angeles, California — Infobox nrhp2 | name =Little Tokyo Historic District nhld = yes caption = location= Los Angeles, California lat degrees = 34 lat minutes = 3 lat seconds = 2 lat direction = N long degrees = 118 long minutes = 14 long seconds = 22 long direction …   Wikipedia

  • Templo de Los Ángeles (California) — «Templo de Los Ángeles» redirige aquí. Para otras acepciones, véase Iglesia Internacional del Evangelio Cuadrangular. Templo de la ciudad de Los Ángeles, California, ubicado en la Santa Monica Boulevard en el distrito Westwood.[1 …   Wikipedia Español

  • Westlake, Los Angeles, California — Westlake is a district in Los Angeles, California. It should not be confused with Westlake Village, an independent municipality in Los Angeles County near Thousand Oaks and close to the Ventura County line.Westlake derives its name from the lake… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”