Tempe Historic Property Survey
| Survey Number: |
HPS-154 |
| Name: |
Latter Day Saints Church |
| Location: |
E. 6th Street |
| Year Built: |
1929 |
| Architectural Style: |
Spanish Colonial Revival |
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints became active in Tempe in the early
1880s, but the first Mormon church was not begun until 1928. The building was constructed
of adobe bricks and plastered with cement stucco. Most of the construction was undertaken
by church members and friends, and was substantially completed by late 1929. In the 1950s,
remodeling and major additions, including a bell tower, significantly altered the original
configuration of the church. The building was demolished in 1996.
The LDS Church was an irregularly-shaped two-story building in Spanish Colonial Revival
style. The building featured stuccoed walls, red tile roofs, and a central bell tower
rising from the ground to project above the roof. Decorative tiles framed the double-door
main entry in the base of the tower. Building roofs were pitched and the tower roof was
hipped. A veranda covered with a tiled shed roof extended from the tower to the building's
north wing. The east end of the front façade featured three two-story round arches. The
round arch was repeated in the front façade of the upper tower, and had an iron-railed
balcony. The original portion of the building (the west end) was adobe.
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Historic Property Survey
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