Provo City Center Temple Open House: January 15 through March 5, 2016 (2024)

A public open house for the Provo City Center Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints begins on January 15, 2016, following a five-year renovation of the former Provo Tabernacle.The tabernacle wasa more than century-old icon located in the central Utah community of Provo.


Click here if you have trouble viewing the video above.

Downloadable 1080p b-roll and SOTs for journalists

The building was transformed from the ashes of the historic tabernacle, which dates back to 1885. An accidental fire gutted the structure on December 17, 2010. PresidentThomas S. Monsonannounced the decision to renovate and convert the tabernacle into a temple during general conference in October of 2011.

Provo City Center Temple Open House: January 15 through March 5, 2016 (1)

“We recognize there is excitement within the community and the Church about this particular temple,” said Presiding BishopGérald Caussé. “What is interesting is this old tabernacle … is being elevated to higher purpose.”

“It’s a magnificent structure; it’s a beautiful temple, a rare gem in the community. … It's truly worthy of a title to be a house of the Lord,” he said.

The Process: From Tabernacle to Temple

Brent Roberts, managing director of the Church’s Special Projects Department, received a phone call at about 3:30 a.m. on the day of the fire. “It was a tragic and difficult day,” he recalled.

Roberts said, “What an incredible effort to be able to take a building that was such a wonderful part of the community and to rebuild it. From a construction standpoint that’s not the easiest thing to do. It would have been easier to start from scratch.”

He gained an appreciation for what the pioneers experienced in building the tabernacle. “I had cranes on site, I had dump trucks, I had concrete [and] I had brick masons. I had at my disposal the best of the best. It took us 40 months to replicate what they did. … It’s miraculous that they were able to do what they did.”

“This is well beyond the abilities of all of us," said Roberts. "This is truly a gem of the Church."

  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo City Center Temple
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo tabernacle
  • The under-construction baptismal font at the Provo City Center Temple in January 2014.
  • Provo City Center Temple (Under Construction)
  • Provo City Center Temple (Under Construction)
  • Provo City Center Temple (Under Construction)
  • Provo City Center Temple (Under Construction)
  • Provo City Center Temple (Under Construction)
  • Provo Baptistry
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo Baptistry
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo tabernacle
  • Provo tabernacle
Temple Square is always beautiful in the springtime. Gardeners work to prepare the ground for General Conference. © 2012 Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 / 2

    Download Photos

    More than 1,000 people have worked on the restoration project, including historians, archaeologists, architects and construction crews.

    Roger Jackson, a principal architect of the FFKR architectural firm, got involved in the project from the time the burned-out structure was still smoldering. “This little beautiful gem of a great building can be saved,” said Jackson, who managed the design process. “The challenge was to really be true to the old building.”

    Provo City Center Temple Open House: January 15 through March 5, 2016 (2)

    FFKR converted the Uintah Stake Tabernacle into the Vernal Utah Temple, and similar work had been done with other buildings in Utah.

    The First Presidency created a committee to look at the potential of rebuilding the tabernacle following a request by the Presiding Bishopric.

    William HarrisonFolsom was invited to be architect of the project and worked closely with leadership in the Utah Stake in his design for the building. Folsomhad worked on the Manti Temple and several other Church buildings and projects. Hecame up with a Victorian Gothic Revival style for the tabernacle, which has been replicated in the new temple. Construction began in 1882.

    One of the main exterior features of the building, a central tower, was removed in 1917 because of structural problems. The tower has been restored as part of the temple design. “And to be able to put it back, we had to go from the photos,” said Jackson.

    Kirk Dickamore, vice president of Jacobsen Construction, was contacted the day following the fire to start clearing the smoldering debris and to shore up the walls until a decision could be made on what to do with the tabernacle. The Salt Lake City-based company has been the contractor for 29 temples.

    In the early hours following the fire, contractors were able to execute an engineering feat that had never been done before to preserve what was left of the tabernacle. An innovative lattice structure was created to stabilize the building.

    "That in itself was miraculous," described Roberts. "Nothing had ever been designed that way. They built it and designed it at the same time."

    “Over several weeks we removed 14 tons of debris from the site,” Dickamore said.

    Once the project got the green light, the building was strengthened by removing two of five layers of brick from the interior and securing the remaining layers with steel ties. A two-layered grid of rebar was then installed inside the perimeter and filled with concrete.

    Provo City Center Temple Open House: January 15 through March 5, 2016 (3)

    "Original brick was salvaged, and numerous stockpiles in the area were sourced to create a seamless exterior," Dickamore explained. The 6.8-million-pound shell was then placed onto 40-foot-high steel stilts seemingly defying gravity to enable excavation of the ground for construction of a basem*nt. "For many weeks it appeared as if the building was hovering in mid-air," he said.

    “It truly was a team effort,” he said, adding “very skilled craftsmen” worked hand in hand with the architects and engineers to construct the three-story temple. “It truly has been an honor to ensure that the vision of the sacred structure has been realized and is ready to fulfill its divine mission.”

    An “Unprecedented” Preservation of Historical Detail

    African mahogany and walnut wood can be found throughout the temple. The majority of the millwork inside came from China. The stone came from various locations around the world, including Utah sandstone that matches the original pieces and rose gold granite from India used in the baptistry.

    Floral designs incorporating the lotus flower, used as an ancient and modern-day religious symbol throughout the world, can be found in the art glass windows and other details. Columbine flowers are depicted throughout the temple on some chairs, benches and door casings. Sunflowers are carved in wood panels in the bride’s room. Unique features of the temple include a circular staircase, an oval-shaped font for baptisms and a reclaimed stained glass image of Jesus Christ in the entry dating back to the early 1900s that came from a Presbyterian church in New York that was demolished.

    The Church goes to great lengths to document and preserve the history of the Church, but Emily Utt of the Church History Department called the documentation of the tabernacle “unprecedented.” Only a handful of temples in the Church are transformations of other buildings such as tabernacles or meetinghouses.

    Provo City Center Temple Open House: January 15 through March 5, 2016 (4)

    “We took almost six months documenting every aspect of the building — its design, its construction, its change, what paint colors there were in the building, where the baseboards came from and all these other details so that the story and the heritage and the significance of this building wouldn’t just be lost completely,” said Utt.

    “We found a lot more architectural details than we were expecting,” she said, which included window trim, baseboards, pews and parts of the rostrum. “We found the original pulpit completely intact. We found one area behind two false walls and four layers of wallpaper, an original hand-painted stencil detail from the 1880s that we never would’ve found without the fire.” The stencil design has been used in the bride’s room, where it consists of vines draped on the top of the walls near the ceiling. Dozens of items were also found, such as a baseball and a shoe.

    The Provo Tabernacle, originally known as the Utah Stake Tabernacle, has been a city and Church landmark since it was built.

    Utt explained the difference between Mormon tabernacles and temples. “Tabernacles are really community centers. They’re open every day of the week. People meet on Sundays in these buildings. They hold concerts and other public events and funerals. Temples, while they still have this very strong community focus, are centered more on helping Latter-day Saints worship and connect with God during the week when maybe their meetinghouse or their tabernacle isn’t as open.”

    “The Provo Tabernacle was a public meeting space for almost a decade before its dedication in 1898,” Utt said. General conferences of the Church in 1886 and 1887 were two of the first major events held in the building.

    “In the century since, the tabernacle has been home to almost weekly Church meetings, including innumerable stake conferences. It has hosted civic events like funerals, lectures, concerts and graduations, and that list goes on and on.”

    Several renovations of the structure have taken place over the years, most recently in the 1980s.

    Richard Talbot, director of the Office of Public Archaeology at Brigham Young University, and his crew of students were able to excavate and retrieve artifacts from the original building and an adjacent wooden baptismal font before work on the Provo City Center Temple could begin.

    “Specifically, we excavated the remaining foundation of the old or the original tabernacle that's located directly north of the temple, as well as a small baptistery and historic well,” described Talbot. A smaller tabernacle was in use until 1918.

    “An abundance of artifacts were recovered that have been and are still being studied,” he said.

    The Church History Department has created on online timeline of the Provo City Center Temple.

    Open House and Dedication Dates

    The Provo City Center Temple is open to the public from January 15 through March 5, 2016. Reservations to tour the temple can be made online or by calling855-537-2000. A cultural celebration will be held on March 19 prior to the temple dedication on March 20.(See update on ticket availability.)

    The Provo City Center Temple is the second temple for the Church in Provo andthe 16th temple in Utah. Once dedicated it becomes the150thoperatingtemple for the Church worldwide. It’s located in the heart of the city at the intersection of University Avenue and 100 South.

    “A lot of people rejoiced because there was a need for a temple here,” said Bishop Causeé. With the nearby Missionary Training Center (MTC) and Brigham Young University, the Provo Utah Temple is busy. “We are hopeful that those two temples will be well attended.”

    “Members of the Church will still come, but they will come with this desire to receive the holy covenants and ordinances in the temple and being blessed and united with their family forever,” he concluded.

    Style Guide Note:When reporting about The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, please use the complete name of the Church in the first reference. For more information on the use of the name of the Church, go to our online Style Guide.

    Provo City Center Temple Open House: January 15 through March 5, 2016 (2024)

    FAQs

    When was the Provo City Center Open House? ›

    SALT LAKE CITY — The First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has announced that the open house of the Provo City Center Temple will begin in January 2016. The free public open house starts on Friday, January 15, and will go through Saturday, March 5, 2016.

    Why is the Provo temple being torn down? ›

    Local attitudes clash with Church policy to reconstruct this historic landmark. The demolition order follows President Russell M. Nelson's General Conference address in October 2022. In the address, President Nelson said the temple would close after the dedication of the Orem Utah Temple.

    When did the Provo City Center Temple burn down? ›

    The Provo Tabernacle burned on December 17, 2010.

    What did the Provo City Center Temple used to be? ›

    From Tabernacle to Temple. During the October 2011 general conference, President Thomas S. Monson announced that the tabernacle walls would be preserved and the building would be rebuilt to become a holy temple. Watch President Monson's announcement of the Provo City Center Temple.

    When was Provo Utah temple built? ›

    A groundbreaking ceremony, to signify the beginning of construction, was held on September 15, 1969. The temple was dedicated on February 9, 1972, by church president Joseph Fielding Smith.

    How long will the Provo Temple be closed? ›

    Temple Reconstruction

    Nelson announced that the Provo Utah Temple would be closed for demolition and reconstruction following the dedication of the Orem Utah Temple. The closure date was later announced as Saturday, February 24, 2024, at the conclusion of ordinance work.

    How much of Provo is Mormon? ›

    In 1875, church President Brigham Young established an academy that rose to university status at the turn of the 20th century. Nearly 90 percent of the population is made up of members of the LDS Church, and many residents are current or former BYU students, a distinction that has shaped the city's culture.

    What is the new name for the Provo Temple? ›

    The Provo Utah Temple will close February 24, 2024, for reconstruction and will be renamed the Provo Utah Rock Canyon Temple.

    How much did the Provo City Center Temple cost? ›

    The building — originally completed in 1898 with a construction cost of around $100,000 — had previously been used for Church meetings, stake and regional conferences, and cultural events.

    What does the Provo Temple symbolize? ›

    The temple has a flat, round base with a spire in the center, made to represent Exodus 13:21 as the Lord went before the children of Israel “by day in a pillar of a cloud, to lead them the way; and by night in a pillar of fire, to give them light.”

    Why is Provo Utah famous? ›

    Provo soon became known as the "Garden City" because of its extensive fruit orchards, trees, and gardens. In the late 1860s, industrialization began with the creation of The Provo Woolen Mills. In the 1920s, the Ironton Steel Mill was established, and later the much larger Geneva Steel Plant was built in the city.

    Which LDS temple looks like the Provo Temple? ›

    Located in Ogden, Utah, it was originally built with a modern, single-spire design similar to the Provo Utah Temple. The temples in Ogden and Provo were designed to be sister temples and are the only ones dedicated by church president Joseph Fielding Smith.

    Who painted the murals in the Provo City Center Temple? ›

    Gary Smith, a mural artist for the Provo City Center Temple, also did murals and paintings for a number of other temples, including the Brigham City Temple instruction room, pictured above.

    When was Provo Rec Center built? ›

    Since its grand opening in 2013, the Provo Rec Center has been the hub of health and wellness activities in the local community.

    When was Provo Towne Center built? ›

    Provo Towne Centre is an enclosed shopping mall in Provo, Utah. Opened in 1998, the mall is anchored by JCPenney, Automotive Addiction, Target, and a Cinemark movie theater. It is managed by Jones Lang LaSalle.

    When was the new Provo High built? ›

    The students originally met at Provo Center School before a specific high school building was built in 1920. The current Provo High School was built in 2018.

    Top Articles
    Latest Posts
    Article information

    Author: Golda Nolan II

    Last Updated:

    Views: 6181

    Rating: 4.8 / 5 (78 voted)

    Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

    Author information

    Name: Golda Nolan II

    Birthday: 1998-05-14

    Address: Suite 369 9754 Roberts Pines, West Benitaburgh, NM 69180-7958

    Phone: +522993866487

    Job: Sales Executive

    Hobby: Worldbuilding, Shopping, Quilting, Cooking, Homebrewing, Leather crafting, Pet

    Introduction: My name is Golda Nolan II, I am a thoughtful, clever, cute, jolly, brave, powerful, splendid person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.