Temple plans filed
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BONITA CANYON -- Newport Beach staff members received their first peek
Tuesday at plans for the county’s first Mormon temple, a
17,500-square-foot house of worship slated to be built at the
intersection of Bonita Canyon Drive and Prairie Road.
And the angel Moroni, whose statue form trumpets from the top of the
temple’s 91-foot-steeple, could herald the first signs of debate. Height
limits for buildings in the Bonita Canyon area mean city planners will
have to consider granting discretionary approval for the slender steeple.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which in April
announced it would build the temple in Newport Beach, took its next major
step Tuesday by filing plans and permit applications with the city.
The church plans to hold meetings with homeowner groups and
individuals whose views will include the new temple. Hoping to charm
neighbors and honor God at the same time, the church plans to include 5
1/2 acres of public gardens with walkways and reflecting pools -- all
surrounding the 35-foot-tall, light-colored granite building.
“We’d like it to be one of the most beautiful experiences a person can
have to go in the building or be around the building,” church spokesman
Joseph Bentley said.
The cost of the project was not disclosed.
The church has owned the 8 1/2-acre site at 2150 Bonita Canyon Drive
since 1992, when it also acquired the land for the 28,500-square-foot
stake center, its worship place now adjacent to the site.
The temple, though, will serve a different purpose integral to the
Mormon faith. Baptisms, marriages and ceremonies to bind parents and
families together for eternity all must be performed in temples.
Now church members must drive to Los Angeles or San Diego for these
ordinances. Mormons literally consider temples to be the house of God.
Steeples, too, have special religious significance, drawing attention
upward toward God.
The steeple may be the only element of the plans to make any waves.
Church planners have gone to great lengths to make the temple amenable
to the Newport Beach community. It will be about a tenth of the size of
the church’s famous Los Angeles temple and a fifth of the size of another
in San Diego. The temple won’t trigger a Greenlight vote, having been
approved before the slow-growth measure’s passage.
It will serve 44,100 members in the region. But church officials
emphasize that it will not hold more than 150 people at any one time,
which they say will eliminate any potential parking or traffic problems.
“The temple will be subject to the same considerations of any other
structure for that area,” City Manager Homer Bludau said.
Planning department staff will review the plans before sending them to
the Planning Commission, probably within eight weeks. The temple is
estimated to be completed in spring 2003.
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