St. Xavier Parish Center
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Project Narrative
St. Xavier Church was completed in 1861 and rebuilt after a fire in 1882. The downtown building supports a thriving Jesuit parish that housed its offices and small gathering spaces in a below-grade “undercroft” space dominated by large plaster-clad piers supporting the sanctuary above. The parish center program called for a large, flexible, open space that could accommodate both large and small gatherings, five church offices, two classrooms, a library and warming kitchen. New exterior construction was limited to a 14’-8” wide strip of church property. The design restores blocked-in openings to a new courtyard, providing daylight and expanding inside to outside. The north pavilion provides a welcoming entrance leading to an interior stair connecting both floors, and an elevator tower clad in sandstone. The south pavilion connects the undercroft with church parking and the sacristy upstairs. Interior glazed sliding panels subdivide one large gathering space into numerous smaller spaces. Reflecting Francis Xavier’s travels to the Far East is the use of teak, bamboo and cherry. Reflecting Jesuit teachings on authenticity and stewardship, the design exposes the building’s original bell-tower foundation, exterior wall construction and twelve piers, each showing their own personality. Salvaged timber beams were repurposed to clad the reception desk and to create a cross. Exposed timber beams and floor joists reveal the charred scars of the 1882 fire.