Quote:
Originally Posted by Steely Dan
It's not just Europe. Here in Chicago there are a lot of examples of older, smaller unused churches being converted into residential.
The results can be pretty janky at times, but still usually better than losing the older church structure altogether.
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To be clear, I wasn't talking about urban areas in Europe. I was talking about outlying rural villages. This is a big issue in particular in France, where
one is lost every two weeks. Rising secularism coupled with a declining population is a toxic combination for any sort of reuse in much of Europe. This can be particularly an issue, paradoxically, because often the local municipality has to pay for the upkeep, and at some point keeping a medieval relic no one uses (and tourists don't even visit) just isn't worthwhile any longer.
I don't think there's anything similar in the U.S., given our history is much shorter. There's plenty of dying rural towns in the high plains, but the churches aren't particularly old, and even if they're of historic age, they're often fairly simple frame structures, not stone buildings which have stood for ten times as long.
But I do think that in some ways they're analogous, albeit at different scales, to office towers. What do you do when the building which helped to define the sense of place of the core of your settlement is completely irrelevant?