Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels

Rudolf Stegers

Description

Despite its extensive sprawl, Los Angeles has over the last few decades undertaken initiatives to strengthen its inner-city areas. The new cathedral just south of Hollywood Freeway is a further initiative in this direction. Surrounded by wide roads – subjecting it to a constant 75 decibels day and night – the church stands at the upper end of a site that slopes gently from west to east, with the cardinal’s residence and diocese curacy located at the lower end. A large plaza, 8,100 square metres in size, enclosed by retaining walls and raised planting mediates between the buildings.

The decision to divide the site into three parts with the cathedral positioned at the west end makes it difficult to place the altar in front of the east wall. To make this possible, a new typology of processional architecture has been devised in which the visitors make their way first along and up the sides of the building before returning back down the centre of the cathedral.

One ascends to the plaza and stands in front of a monumental structure cast in concrete pigmented the distinctive yellowish colour of adobe. The horizontal sections of wall look like shingles laid one over the other. The entrance to the church is marked by a sculpture. The central nave measures 101.65 metres in length. To the north and south it is flanked by a series of full-height side chapels, each side with an ambulatory that runs behind them. Unlike most church plans, the niches are turned outwards, allowing the main nave to remain the centre of attention between the baptistry and presbytery, between the pool for baptismal submersion and the space around the red marble altar. The floor is paved with sandstone, the ceiling made of cedar and douglas fir, and the pews and the organ of cherry.

The load-bearing rear and side walls of the side chapels allow huge curtain-like surfaces of precious alabaster to be suspended on the outside walls. Light shines through these translucent surfaces, illuminating the ambulatories and the tall narrow spaces between the side chapels as well as deep into the main nave. Slightly offset from the central axis and arranged high up in the rear wall is a glazed “jewel box” that projects both inwards and outwards and features a giant mullion and transom, which cuts the figure of the cross into the morning light.

Los Angeles was founded by Iberian Franciscans and their mission stations influence the form of the church on the freeway. Although the Cathedral is demonstratively processional in its architecture, it does attempt to achieve a balance between the paradoxical principles of axial and centralised arrangements. Its basic figure is cruciform with a nave and transept; the pews and chairs surround the altar on three sides. In its capacity for creating community, the architecture is both monumental and functional.


Bibliography

Architectural Design, no. 11/12/1999, pp. 80- | Architectural Record, no. 11/2002, cover, pp. 124- | Architectural Research Quarterly, no. 3/4/2003, pp. 333- | The Architectural Review, no. 3/2003, pp. 44- | Architecture and Urbanism, no. 10/1998, pp. 36- and no. 3/2003, pp. 60- | Architektur Aktuell, no. 1/2/2003, pp. 44- | Area, no. 67/2003, pp. 88- | Arquitectura Viva, no. 51/1996, p. 7 and no. 58/1998, pp. 60-, p. 115 and no. 84/2002, p. 5 and no. 85/2002, pp. 92- | AV Monografías, no. 95/2002, cover, pp. 106- and no. 113/2005, p. 171, pp. 174- | Ars Sacra, no. 3/1997, cover, pp. 6-, p. 123 and no. 18/2001, pp. 18-, pp. 177- | Bauwelt, no. 26/1996, p. 1505 and no. 47/2000, pp. 30- and no. 4/2003, pp. 26- | Capella, Juli: Rafael Moneo. Diseñador, Barcelona 2003, pp. 64- | Casabella, no. 677/2000, pp. 8-, pp. 90- | Chiesa Oggi, no. 45/2000/2001, pp. 28- and no. 64/65/2004, pp. 28- | Chroniques d’Art Sacré, no. 83/2005, p. 24 | El Croquis, no. 91/1998, pp. 118- and no. 98/1999, pp. 160- | Domus, no. 853/2002, pp. 34- | Faith and Form, no. 4/2001, pp. 11- and no. 1/2004, p. 28 and no. 3/2004, pp. 18- | Flagge, Ingeborg, Schneider, Romana (Ed.): Die Revision der Postmoderne, exhibition catalogue, Hamburg 2004, pp. 278- | Frankfurter Allgemeine, 3. 9. 2002, p. 35 | GA Global Architecture Document, no. 58/1999, pp. 72- and no. 72/2002, pp. 94- | Heathcote, Edwin, Moffatt, Laura: Contemporary Church Architecture, Chichester 2007, pp. 178- | Neue Zürcher Zeitung, Internationale Ausgabe, 14./15. 12. 2002, p. 53 | On Diseño, no. 237/2002, cover, pp. 138- | The Phaidon Atlas of Contemporary World Architecture, Comprehensive Edition, London 2004, p. 670 | Richardson, Phyllis: New Sacred Architecture, London 2004, pp. 162- | Roberts, Nicholas W.: Building Type Basics for Places of Worship, Hoboken / New Jersey 2004, pp. 51-, pp. 92-, p. 115, p. 169, p. 173, p. 181, pp. 204-, p. 219, p. 222, pp. 226-, colour inlay ill. 1, ill. 2, ill. 3, ill. 4a, ill. 4b | Techniques et Architecture, no. 463/2002/2003, pp. 102-

Drawings

This browser does not support PDFs.

Top view of entire complex

This browser does not support PDFs.

Ground floor

This browser does not support PDFs.

Cross section looking west

This browser does not support PDFs.

Cross section looking east

This browser does not support PDFs.

Longitudinal section


Originally published in: Rudolf Stegers, Sacred Buildings: A Design Manual, Birkhäuser, 2008.

Building Type Sacred Buildings

Morphological Type Complex/Ensemble, Entire Block

Urban Context Central Business District/City Center, Urban Block Structure

Architect José Rafael Moneo

Year 2002

Location Los Angeles, CA

Country USA

Geometric Organization Linear

Footprint Entire site 21,150 m², church 4,000 m²

Seating Capacity Pews 1,900, chairs 1,100

Height Low-Rise (up to 3 levels), Mid-Rise (4 to 7 levels)

Load-Bearing Structure Column-and-Slab, Solid Construction, Wide-Span Structures

Access Type Courtyard Access

Layout Centralized Assembly Space, Court Plan

New Building, Refurbishment or Extension New Building

Denomination Roman Catholic

Program Church Complexes & Large Churches

Client Archdiocese of Los Angeles

Map Link to Map