|

Master Planning
Joseph R. Miller
We need a master plan that will facilitate the ministry.
Site Capacity
Begin by determining the maximum capacity of the site. If all the land can be
used (no wetlands or elevations that cannot be developed), we can usually plan
on 100 people per acre for church use, not including the major sports areas
needed for a Christian school. If there are reasonable setbacks and land coverage criteria (some codes limit the amount of building or impervious development) and sanitary sewer are available, this guideline of 100 people per acre should provide some recreation area. Landscaping and greenbelts may also utilize a significant portion of the site. The configuration of the land is another factor; a triangular site with building setbacks and perimeter greenbelts has less usable land. A rectangular or a square site is best.
Ministry Plan
Will the church schedule multiple sessions of worship and/or Sunday school? Or
do we prefer a single service format? We must provide adequate assimilation
spaces (education, fellowship, administration)based on your ministry philosophyto facilitate the number of people who can be assembled for
worship. The space distribution must also correspond to age distribution. This
provision of a balance of spaces for all age groups must be provided for each
phase of facility development.
Harmonized Phases
We will seek to harmonize the use of phase one space with the uses in phase two
and then harmonize both previous phases with phase three development to limit
costly remodeling. The final worship center should be located on the focal point
of the siteadvertising the primary function of the church: worship (not sports or classroom functions). Combine related functions (such as education, fellowship, and recreation) in the preferable pods (related functions) of development to avoid overlapping age groups or ending up with conflicting functions. This combination of related functions will also facilitate heating or cooling zones.
Parking
Plan for adequate parking for each phase. Use the same ratio as the household
size (usually about 2.5) or a lower ratio if you plan more than one session of
worship. This allows ample parking for exchange of spaces and facility occupancy. The site master plan should allocate areas for all future parking and other site uses, avoiding the moving of developed parking in the future if possible.
Funding
Financial capacity is usually another determining factor. What project budget is
available for phase one? How much growth should you plan for in each phase? In
most instances, we suggest you provide adequate facilities to double the attendance when your church occupies its new or expanded facility. Otherwise,
the church will be overextended financially, or the attendance will be too small
for the room capacity, leaving a feeling of coldness and distance.
Worship Center
The most expensive church space to construct is the worship center, especially
if we address the preferences, aesthetics, acoustics, and comfort expectations
of our day. A low ceiling in a room meant for a large crowd limits all three of
these preferences. A minimal volume of air with the low ceiling in the assembly
area means that the air must be exchanged more rapidly to maintain a comfortable temperature, thus creating discomforting drafts. In most cases for the new church, we save the primary worship center as a future phase in order to get
more functional space for the initial limited investment. But we must still provide adequate worship space, even though the area may also serve other functions.
Classrooms
Classroom space is the least costly to construct, especially if the rooms are
larger with flexible use for each age group rather than single-use small
cubicles. The larger open rooms reduce the number of walls to construct and the
total square feet required to serve the functional requirements. Limited use of
floor-to-ceiling movable walls can increase the uses of an area, thus reducing
the total square feet of building required. However, excessive use of movable
walls may eliminate the savings of reduced square footage, since movable walls
may cost four times as much as a fixed interior wall. Freestanding, movable
partitions are a much better solution and adequately serve the functional needs,
providing that a compatible small-group teaching philosophy is in place.
Gymnasium
An activities center (gymnasium, family life center, Timothy center, fellowship
hall, or whatever you prefer to call it) may cost more than classrooms, but less
than the worship center, depending on height and finishes. Functions must be
carefully defined, along with desired finishes and durability, to provide a facility that will address more than a single use purpose. The metal building or pole barn without interior finishes or a masonry exterior is not compatible with most suburban residential settings. Without appropriate finishes, the functional problems and lack of durability are often undesirable.
Multipurpose Phase One
In most cases, I recommend a multipurpose facility for the first phase of
development on a new site, saving the main worship center as a future phase when the church attendance is greater. The phase one worship area is usually a future fellowship hall or classrooms with future partitions. It may be a future sports facility; however, the initial aesthetics should address the primary phase one worship function, saving the sports equipment and finishes until a worship center is provided.
I strongly discourage a gymnasium for worship when basketball, Awana games, and volleyball are held in the same area as worship, or when acoustics do not
encourage participatory worship. The sports facility does not address the expectations of a white-collar community; but the nicer facility will address the expectations of both white- and blue-collar preferences.
Movable, comfortable, molded or upholstered seating (rather than metal folding
chairs) on a level floor, durable but aesthetically pleasing finishes such as a
commercial carpeted-floor, adequate lighting, refreshing colors on finished walls and ceilings, and proper acoustics can make a room dimensioned as a future
gymnasium an adequate phase one worship area. For the smaller church, a multipurpose area with a ceiling height of ten or twelve feet, instead of twenty
feet for a gymnasium, can represent a considerable cost savings and prove to be
adequate.
I do not believe the small church needs, or can afford, a gymnasium as a primary
tool for church ministry. Rent a school gymnasium occasionally, or plan activities for the entire church rather than spectator sports for a few.
Inviting Features
The church master plan should always display an inviting entry visible from the
site entry. Parking should be convenient to the entry, with designated parking
spaces for the disabled and the visitors. Landscaping should be generous as a
sign of life, enhancing the site and blending the facility to the surrounding
site. Inside the entry, the rest room entrances should be visible. The administrative space and entry should be apparent to the visitor.
For church services, provide a welcome center and greeters to welcome and assist
visitors. The nurseries should be close to the entry and to the worship area,
with other age group areas in age sequence to follow.
We must always think of the church building as a tool facilitating outreach,
evangelism, discipleship, and assimilation. Make the only opportunity for a
first impression a positive experience. Then adequately facilitate appropriate
ministry goals for assimilation and discipleship.
|