Religious Architecture in Minnesota
Authored by Iris Steiner-Manning and Sebass Cherian in 2024
Architecture is one of many ways religious groups express themselves, both to outsiders and to their communities. Minnesota is full of different kinds of religious architecture, and each building tells a complex story about the people it serves.
Some Minnesota communities have built large, dramatic structures that solidify their presence in the state. The Cathedral of St. Paul, which looms over the city from a hilltop, was a way for Catholics to establish themselves. Built almost one hundred years later, the Cambodian Buddhist Watt Munisotaram serves a similar role and creates a peaceful home for a community of refugees. These purposefully built buildings demonstrate the hopes and histories of their faith communities.
However, since constructing grand buildings from scratch is extremely expensive, many religious communities in Minnesota have had to create their own religious spaces in pre-existing buildings built for other purposes. The ways in which religious communities have interacted with the spaces they've repurposed can provide insight into how the histories and faiths of those communities fit into the wider social fabric of Minnesota.