First Baptist Church (former) / VCU Hunton Student Center (Richmond, Virginia)
USA /
Virginia /
Richmond /
Richmond, Virginia /
East Broad Street
World
/ USA
/ Virginia
/ Richmond
World / United States / Virginia
university, church, Baptist church, NRHP - National Register of Historic Places, Greek Revival (architecture)
Famed architect Thomas U. Walter of Philadelphia provided the restrained but authoritative Greek Revival design for the Old First Baptist Church. Walter, best known as architect for the dome of the U.S. Capitol, designed some 10 buildings for Virginia. Old First Baptist is his only remaining Richmond work. Construction began in 1839, and two years later, the congregation moved in. Walter’s design, dominated by a Doric portico in muris, had a strong influence on the city’s ecclesiastical architecture. At least four Baptist churches were modeled directly after it, including the old First African Baptist church just two blocks away.
During the Civil War, the church was used as an emergency hospital for Confederate wounded. The congregation sold the building to the Medical College of Virginia in 1928. The Baptists subsequently built a large new church on Monument Avenue and gave it a Greek Doric portico modeled on that of the parent church. Threatened with demolition on in the 1970s, Old First Baptist has since been sympathetically renovated by Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine to serve as a student study center. The sanctuary is largely intact and preserves its original three-sided gallery. A handsome plaster ceiling medallion accents the space. Despite the surrounding tall buildings of the medical school complex, the building maintains a strong architectural presence on Broad Street. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Includes The Hideaway Cafe, Student Learning Center, Information Center, Dean of Student's Office (MCV Campus), MCV Campus Student Government Association offices, group study rooms, large student lounge and other facilties administered by University Student Commons and Activities.
During the Civil War, the church was used as an emergency hospital for Confederate wounded. The congregation sold the building to the Medical College of Virginia in 1928. The Baptists subsequently built a large new church on Monument Avenue and gave it a Greek Doric portico modeled on that of the parent church. Threatened with demolition on in the 1970s, Old First Baptist has since been sympathetically renovated by Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine to serve as a student study center. The sanctuary is largely intact and preserves its original three-sided gallery. A handsome plaster ceiling medallion accents the space. Despite the surrounding tall buildings of the medical school complex, the building maintains a strong architectural presence on Broad Street. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Includes The Hideaway Cafe, Student Learning Center, Information Center, Dean of Student's Office (MCV Campus), MCV Campus Student Government Association offices, group study rooms, large student lounge and other facilties administered by University Student Commons and Activities.
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Baptist_Church_(Richmond,_Virginia)
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 37°32'23"N 77°25'52"W
- Virginia Commonwealth University, Monroe Park Campus 2.8 km
- The University of Richmond 11 km
- Virginia State University 33 km
- Randolph Farm (VSU) 34 km
- University of Mary Washington 86 km
- Hampden-Sydney College 97 km
- University of Virginia - Morven Estate 105 km
- University of Virginia 112 km
- Old Dominion University 122 km
- Horn Point Lab (UMCES) 163 km
- City Center 0.5 km
- Downtown Richmond 0.7 km
- Gamble's Hill 1.2 km
- Monroe Ward 1.3 km
- Jackson Ward 1.3 km
- Oregon Hill 1.8 km
- Old Manchester 2.2 km
- Hollywood Cemetery 2.3 km
- James River Park - Main Section 3.3 km
- The Fan District 3.3 km