The Star Malaysia - Star2

Saved and repurposed

The transforma­tion of this old us church into unique apartments represents a bridge between the past and the future.

- By SARAH ELLIS

COLUMBIA’S old Rosewood Baptist Church in South Carolina, the United States, may never not look like a church.

This fall, when residents fill into modern new apartments inside the half-century-old sanctuary, they’ll set their dining tables beneath 40-foot (12m) arched windows, once filled by colourful stained glass.

Their decor will be flanked by the old church’s dark oak panels; some will have the white-painted cinder block walls of former Sunday school classrooms. Someone’s living room will sit roughly in the footprint of the former baptismal pool.

And one unique apartment will boast a 20ft-plus (6m) tall stained glass mosaic of Jesus Christ, arms and hands outstretch­ed. (A constructi­on worker on site cheekily referenced the apartment as “the Jesus Suite”.)

The unmissable steeple will still tower above it all.

“During the design, one of the first things we talked about was the steeple,” said Frank Cason, whose Columbia developmen­t group is undertakin­g the church’s transforma­tion, along with Garvin Design Group architects and Boyer Constructi­on, at the corner of Sloan Street and Rosewood Drive.

“I was leaning toward, should we take that off? And our architect said, this is always going to be a church. It’s always going to read as a church. Why would you take that off? It’s not going to make it less of a church.”

So they kept the steeple.

Novel concept

The apartments, dubbed 5th and Sloan, are shaping up as a carefully thought-out blend of old and new. Even the name of the under-constructi­on complex is an ode to the historic name of Rosewood Drive, 5th Avenue.

The apartments also represent, possibly for the first time in Columbia, the transforma­tion of a traditiona­l church sanctuary into something besides a church. It’s a transition that’s happened in other places – the current Church and Union restaurant in downtown Charleston, for instance, not to mention apartments, gyms, breweries, skate parks and a wide range of other new uses for churches, usually in places farther outside the Bible Belt. But it’s still a novel concept in a region traditiona­lly known for a proliferat­ion of churches on every corner, figurative­ly (and sometimes literally) speaking.

In a number of ways, the church-to-apartments transforma­tion represents a bridge between the past and the future of this spot in Columbia. And it’s still a nod to a church community that hasn’t disappeare­d but has relocated farther down the Rosewood corridor in a smaller space, as the congregati­on has shrunk in recent years.

Retaining the charm

Cason jumped at the opportunit­y to undertake the transforma­tive project, almost as soon as the church building hit the market in 2019, believing the structure could be saved and repurposed. Some people in the community thought it should be turned into a brewery, while others couldn’t believe Cason would even consider touching the sanctuary, the developer said. Since work began at the site last October, it’s been almost a daily task to decide what details can and should be preserved as constructi­on progresses, Cason said.

“The big challenge is ... it’s a new use for the structure, while maintainin­g the fact that there was a church, and we don’t want to hide that, and we don’t want to lose that,” Cason said. “That’s part of the charm.”

Columbia as a city places a high value on historic preservati­on. And while the Rosewood church building itself does not have a historic designatio­n, the structure and the congregati­on that once filled it have “significan­ce” to the surroundin­g community, Cason said.

“It can be cheaper to tear things down and start from scratch,” the developer acknowledg­ed. “There’s a place to tear down, and there’s a place for keeping. Just because a building is old doesn’t mean it should be kept, and just because it would be easier to tear down doesn’t mean it should happen like that . ... This is the way we want historic properties to be, where you can blend them in with new; you can add to them.”

The 49 apartments at 5th and Sloan are expected to open to residents in October. A mix of one- and two-bedroom units, some of them two storeys tall, will be spread across the former sanctuary, classroom building and a newly constructe­d building between them.

The complex will include a fitness centre, a lounge for residents and an outdoor courtyard, and several apartments will have outdoor balconies. Rents will range from US$1,425 to US$2,400 (RM6,400 to RM10,775).

 ?? — photos: TNs ?? The former site
of rosewood Church in south Carolina, the united states, is being transforme­d into three apartment buildings.
— photos: TNs The former site of rosewood Church in south Carolina, the united states, is being transforme­d into three apartment buildings.
 ?? ?? The sanctuary of the church will include eight apartment units, one of which is built around the stained glass window.
The sanctuary of the church will include eight apartment units, one of which is built around the stained glass window.

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