Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels Information & Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels Links at HealthHaven.com
advertise
add site
services
publishers
database
health videos
Bookmark and Share

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 
about
toolbar
stats
live show
health store
more stuff
JOIN/LOGIN
Featured Results:
Angel Therapy, Angel Workshops, Angel Healing,
Angel Therapy, Angel Workshops, Angel Healing,
keystolight.co.uk
 Dr. Angel Serrano | Director Dental Angel Serrano
Dr. Angel Serrano | Director Dental Angel Serrano
dentaltijuana.com
 Angel Cream. Original angel cream
Angel Cream. Original angel cream
natural-health-informatio...
 
Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels

Cathedral Our Lady of the Angels
555 West Temple Street
Los Angeles, CA 90012

Basic information
Location Los Angeles, California
United States
Affiliation Roman Catholic Church
Province Archdiocese of Los Angeles
District Archdiocese of Los Angeles
Ecclesiastical status Cathedral
Leadership Archbishop of Los Angeles
Website Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels
Architectural description
Architect(s) Rafael Moneo
Architectural type Rather odd mix of California Mission and Butler Building
Architectural style Postmodern
Year completed 2002
Construction cost $250M
Specifications
Capacity 3,000 people
Length 333 ft (100 m)

The Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, also called the Los Angeles Cathedral, is a cathedral church of the United States in Los Angeles, California. It is the mother church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles[1] and seat of its archbishop, currently Roger Cardinal Mahony.[2]

Consecrated and dedicated on September 2, 2002,[1] the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels replaced the smaller Cathedral of Saint Vibiana, which was severely damaged in the 1994 Northridge Earthquake.[1] While some felt St. Vibiana's Cathedral was irreparably damaged, the site was eventually taken over by the city which sold the former cathedral building to developer Tom Gilmore in 1999 for $4.6M. Gilmore has spent an additional $6M renovating it and turning it into a performing arts complex, now named "Vibiana." [3]

It is mother church to over four million professed Catholics in the archdiocese.[4] Our Lady of the Angels is home to the relics of Saint Vibiana, brought from Rome by Thaddeus Amat y Brusi, the first bishop of Los Angeles.

Contents

[edit] Design

Robert Graham's postmodern The Virgin Mary adorns the cathedral entrance.

The cathedral was designed by the Pritzker Prize-winning Spanish architect Rafael Moneo[1][5]. Using elements of postmodern architecture, the church and the Cathedral Center feature a series of acute and obtuse angles. There is an absence of right angles. Contemporary statuaries and appointments decorate the complex. Prominent of these appointments are the bronze doors and the statue called The Virgin Mary, all adorning the entrance and designed by Robert Graham.

Like the later Oakland Cathedral of Christ the Light, which replaced the earthquake-damaged Saint Francis de Sales Cathedral, Our Lady of the Angels is a base isolated structure for protection against earthquake structural damage.

The site of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels is 5.6 acres (23,000 m²) bound by Temple Street, Grand Avenue, Hill Street and the Hollywood Freeway.[1]

A detail from Robert Nava's tapestry of the communion of saints.

The 12-story high building can accommodate over 3,000 worshippers. The site includes the cathedral proper, a 2.5 acre (10,000 m²) plaza, several gardens and water features, the Cathedral Center (with the gift shop, the Galero Grill, conference center, and cathedral parish offices), and the cathedral rectory, the archepiscopal residence and some cathedral clergy. The entire complex is 58,000 square feet (5,000 m²). The main sanctuary is 333 feet (100 m) long (purposely one foot longer than  St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York). The internal height varies from 80' over the baptistery at the rear (west) end to about 100' near the lantern window (east end).

Among the artworks commissioned for the cathedral are the tapestries of the communion of saints by painter John Nava, and the plaza fountain by Lita Albuquerque and Robert Kramer. The cathedral is noted for having the largest use of alabaster in the country.[citation needed] They replaced the more traditional stained glass windows, providing the interior with soft, warm, subtly multi-hued illumination. The organ, built by Dobson Pipe Organ Builders of Lake City, Iowa, has 105 ranks of pipes, some of which were retained from the 1980 Austin organ from St. Vibiana's Cathedral. The case of the organ is approximately 60 feet (18 m) high, and is placed about 24 feet (7.3 m) above the floor.  The top of the organ's case is about 85 feet (26 m) above the cathedral's floor.

[edit] History

The inside of the cathedral
Altar of the Lord of Miracles inside of the cathedral

Estimates for the restoration of the earthquake damaged Cathedral of Saint Vibiana ranged around $180 million. The structure was eventually restored by developers Tom Gilmore and Richard Weintraub, who spent only around $6 million transforming it into an events center and performance venue.

Because the old cathedral was known to be of rather inferior construction (something noted soon after its completion in 1876) and had been far too small for diocesan celebrations for decades, the archdiocese chose to build a new cathedral (ultimately on a new site). The decision to change venues was influenced in part by conservationists, who argued that the outmoded cathedral ought to be restored and preserved as a historic landmark, and the needs of the new cathedral itself — it was to have a capacity of approximately 3,000 worshipers, the same number as a cathedral design from the 1940s that was never built, yet provided the Holy See-approved name for the new cathedral. Initially, the proposed budget was $150 million, but as the charities and donations kept coming, the architects and builders were able to implement everything desired. Thus, the final cost of the new cathedral was $189.7 million.

CathederalDowntown.jpg

Cardinal Mahony's decision to rebuild the Los Angeles cathedral in such elaborate and post-modern architecture drew criticism from a number of critics both within and outside the Catholic Church, who argued that a church of that size and expense was unnecessary and overly-elaborate. Many felt that either St. Vincent Church on West Adams Boulevard or St. Basil Church on South Kingsley Drive could easily perform the functions required of a cathedral with minimal additional cost. Our Lady of the Angels Cathedral was also criticized for its departure from traditional California Mission-style architecture and aesthetics.

The price for some cathedral furnishings have also caused great consternation. $5M was budgeted for the altar or "table" -- essentially a giant slab of Rosso Laguna marble. The main bronze doors cost $3M. $2M was budgeted for the wooden ambo (lectern), and $1M for a very controversial tabernacle. $1M for the cathedra (bishop's chair). $250K for the presider's chair. $250K for each deacon's chair. Visiting bishops' chairs cost $150K each, while pews cost an average of $50K each. The cantor's stand cost $100K while each bronze chandelier/speaker cost $150K.[6] The great costs incurred in its construction and Mahoneys long efforts to get it built led critics to dub it the "Taj Mahoney".[7]

[edit] Mausoleum

Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels

The Cathedral features a mausoleum in its lower levels. There are 6,000 mausoleum crypts and columbarium niches for burials.

The final resting place of actor Gregory Peck in the Cathedral's Crypt Mausoleum.

 A number of prior Bishops and Archbishops of the Los Angeles Archdiocese are buried in the crypt mausoleum. The laity are also permitted to purchase burial crypts or niches for their own use or use of their family members. The proceeds from the sale of spaces are placed in an endowment fund for financial stability of the Cathedral.

The crypt mausoleum features a number of stained glass windows that were originally installed in Saint Vibiana's Cathedral.  Two new windows featuring guardian angels were placed at the entrance to the crypt mausoleum.  Both the new windows and the restoration of the old Cathedral's windows were done by The Judson Studios.

[edit] People buried at the Cathedral

[edit] Religious

A series of articles on
Roman Catholic
Mariology

Raphael - Madonna dell Granduca.jpg

General articles
Overview of Mariology
Veneration of the Blessed VirginHistory of Mariology

Expressions of devotion
ArtMusicArchitecture

Specific articles
ApparitionsSaintsPopesDogmas and DoctrinesMovements & Societies

[edit] Entertainers

[edit] Other laity

  • Bernardine Murphy Donohue, philanthropist and papal countess
  • Loretta Baron Mahony, mother of the current Archbishop of Los Angeles
  • Victor Mahony, father of the current Archbishop of Los Angeles
  • Robert Graham, sculptor

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 34°3′30″N 118°14′45″W / 34.05833°N 118.24583°W / 34.05833; -118.24583

[edit] Further reading

  • Bühren, Ralf van: Kunst und Kirche im 20. Jahrhundert. Die Rezeption des Zweiten Vatikanischen Konzils, Paderborn: Ferdinand Schöningh 2008, p. 609-610, ill. 85-87 (ISBN 978-3-506-76388-4)



Product Results (view all...)

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 



↑ top of page ↑about thumbshots