
I’m working on a feature about
churches that are creatively converting their buildings and properties into
community hubs and affordable housing. It got me thinking about the various
articles I have written on this topic, going back 15 years—nine articles in total.
It’s an important issue; sometime
in the next five to ten years, a third of Canada’s estimated 27,000 places of
worship (most of them churches) are slated to close due to falling attendance.
What can be done? And what is already happening? If you
want to learn more, check out some of the links below.
My first article on the topic
was in 2010, when I wrote an overview of the situation in Canada titled Keeping Faith in Historic Churches.
I did another one in 2015, titled Does it Matter if a Historic Church Closes? The answer, unsurprisingly, is
yes—for various reasons, including all the community, newcomer, arts and recovery groups that would lose space.
In 2017, I wrote about The Halo Effect, or What are Places of Worship Really
Worth to a Community? It’s about a way of calculating the economic value
of places of worship in a community—and what would be lost if they disappeared.
(I wrote about it again in 2023 for Canadian Affairs; according to the Halo Effect, places of worship are worth over $18
billion to the Canadian economy.)
In 2019, I wrote about a church in Ottawa that had been converted into a meeting and convention
space. “We worked with the community to repurpose it,”
Leanne Moussa, president of allsaints Development Inc., said of how the
building became a popular venue for weddings, funerals, parties, conferences,
theatre, concerts and other events.
In 2024, I interviewed Mark Elsdon, editor of the book Gone for Good? Negotiating the Coming Wave of
Church Property Transition. Elsdon created the book to get congregations to
start thinking now about what happens when there are no longer enough people to
make their church viable. Rather than wait until there are few options on the
table, “Let’s talk about it now, get in front of it,” he said.
And this year I interviewed leaders of some
Lutheran churches in Canada who are converting their buildings and properties into
affordable housing. I was taken by the words of Jennifer Hoover, the congregational
redevelopment advisor for the Eastern Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church
in Canada, about a new way for congregations to view the changes they are
experiencing today.
“We need to reframe that narrative, away from one
of having failed,” she said, explaining that it is a chance for congregations
“to think about what new thing is possible, about new ways they can use the
building in ways that are consistent with their mission, vision and values.”
Also in 2025 I did a story about Winnipeg’s Lutheran Church of the Cross, which closed so its building could be converted
into apartments for seniors. And one about how Gordon King Memorial Church in Winnipeg has reimagined
itself as a community hub, including a popular coffee house named “Gordie’s.”
It’s an ongoing story; with so many buildings slated
to close, there will be many more opportunities to write about this topic.
Photo above: St. Peter's Lutheran Church in Kitchener, which is converting its Christian education wing into affordable housing.