History of Design and Construction
The design and construction of North Christian Church was a collaboration between Eero Saarinen and Associates and a congregation with such prominent members as J. Irwin and Xenia Miller. Since Eero Saarinen passed unexpectedly, collaboration included office associates, namely Kevin Roche, John Dinkeloo, Maurice B. Allen, and Paul Kennon, who completed the church after his death. The landscape was the work of Dan Kiley and Alexander Girard designed textiles and liturgical objects.
J. Irwin Miller was a wealthy industrialist and philanthropist who headed the Cummins Engine Company and had a keen interest in architecture. He established the Cummins Foundation, created “To encourage architectural excellence in Bartholemew County”[1], by assisting publicly-funded facilities in selecting and funding design services.
As a distinguished member of the newly established Disciples of Christ congregation, Miller recommended Eero Saarinen for the design of the new church. Miller met Eero during the construction of First Christian Church, designed by Eero’s father Eliel Saarinen and completed in 1942. Prior to the church commission, Eero had been hired to design the family’s summer home in Windermere, Ontario, completed in 1952, the Irwin Conference Center (formerly Irwin Union Bank), completed in 1954, and the Miller House and Garden in Columbus, completed in 1957.
In the book Eero Saarinen On His Work: A selection of buildings dating 1947-1964 [2], Saarinen’s words clearly describe the design he envisioned: a cathedral-like structure, where the sanctuary and the spire dominate the landscape. Commenting on church designs of the period, where lesser functions overshadow the sanctuary, he saw one geometrically-simple structure, with all planes rising “organically into the spire.” He describes the importance of the procession, and the symbolism of ascending into the sanctuary. He envisioned the church situated within a beautiful landscape. With its centrality in the liturgy of the Disciples of Christ, the communion table would be centrally located with the seating organized equally around it, to create a sense of being joined together in an enclosed spiritual world. He considered light crucial in creating a spiritual atmosphere and envisioned a central oculus lighting the communion table, and a “contracting” light in the seating area.
The resulting design was an elongated hexagonal plan, a geometric motif repeated throughout, a one-story structure, with a buried lower-level, under a large hexagonal sloped roof rising to form a dominating spire. The building is surrounded by cultivated berms and sits on a 13-acre site fully developed by landscape architect Dan Kiley.
After Saarinen’s sudden death, Kevin Roche and John Dinkeloo took over the practice and developed the working drawings, with construction completed in 1964. The names of Paul Kennon and Maurice B. Allen, associates in the office, appear regularly in the different meeting minutes and correspondence. Dan Kiley, and Alexander Girard, who were both also involved in the design of the Miller House, were respectively responsible for the landscape and the design of textiles, ceremonial flatware, chalices, and vestments for the church.
Kiley was not brought in until after the building was completed, in the summer of 1964. The site at the time was smaller, and shaped like a grand piano occupying the northeastern corner of the existing site. An initial site design out of Saarinen’s office was modified by Kiley to include a grove of magnolias to the north of the building and another to the south, with trees surrounding and separating the parking bays. Ground coverage and flowers were to be planted on the berms and in the moats to soften the strict geometry of the building. The planting scheme of the magnolia groves extended the geometry of the building onto the landscape, while at the same time the orthogonal rows tied the site to the Columbus town grid.
By 1971 the congregation had grown to 400, and the parking and driveway became insufficient. Around the same time, the church site was expanded to more than double its original size. In Kiley’s final plan for the larger site, issued in 1974, the southern magnolia grove was further extended, following the existing geometry, and a large lawn was planned south of the parking lot. The enhanced parking was delineated by arborvitae and maple trees. A strong symmetrical axis emphasized the processional experience into the narthex and sanctuary. West of the parking, new trees were planted along a grid, and maple allées were planted along Sycamore Street, and Tipton Lane, to the east and south.
Subsequent minor alterations were carried out by Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates (KRJDA) and local firms Storrow|Kinsella, Todd Williams and Louis Joyner.
While the church was designated a National Historic Landmark in 2000, and in 2016 it received a substantial grant, the congregation continued to shrink and on July 16, 2022, held its last service at the church. On August 1, 2022 ownership of the building was transferred to the Columbus Capital Foundation, an interim custodian, until a new and appropriate use could be found.
In a public ceremony on April 8, 2025, the building was added as a branch of the Bartholomew County Public Library and renamed the LEX (Library of Experience). Refurbishing and improvements to accessibility are required before the branch officially opens, sometime in 2028. Meanwhile, the community is making use of the grounds.[3]