End Times and Architectural Style on the Christian Campus

This paper examines the idea of architectural style on evangelical Christian campuses built during the Cold War, a period during which religious cosmologies came into contact with the prospect of nuclear disaster, allowing for a temporary alliance between secular and religious visions of the end of...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rachel Engler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: TU Delft OPEN Publishing 2022-05-01
Series:Footprint
Online Access:https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/footprint/article/view/6132
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850106894247526400
author Rachel Engler
author_facet Rachel Engler
author_sort Rachel Engler
collection DOAJ
description This paper examines the idea of architectural style on evangelical Christian campuses built during the Cold War, a period during which religious cosmologies came into contact with the prospect of nuclear disaster, allowing for a temporary alliance between secular and religious visions of the end of human history. In this context of Cold War-era end-of-the-world thinking, and in relation to the biblical anticipation of the apocalypse, I consider the contrasting choices of so-called futuristic and neo-vernacular idioms in the building projects of television evangelists. What does it mean to revive styles of the past, or to build in a mode oriented toward the future, when the end of history is imminent? Design undertaken within the framework of assumed apocalyptic narratives troubles notions of permanence and durability—historically vital terms for thinking about building. The paper takes two primary case studies: Robertson’s Regent University in Virginia Beach, which hosts the Christian Broadcasting Network and was built in a “Jeffersonian” vernacular; and Oral Roberts’s Tulsa university, unique at the time for its gilded modernism.
format Article
id doaj-art-4daec682e34242dd9e676ef122b03c19
institution OA Journals
issn 1875-1504
1875-1490
language English
publishDate 2022-05-01
publisher TU Delft OPEN Publishing
record_format Article
series Footprint
spelling doaj-art-4daec682e34242dd9e676ef122b03c192025-08-20T02:38:43ZengTU Delft OPEN PublishingFootprint1875-15041875-14902022-05-0115210.7480/footprint.15.2.6132End Times and Architectural Style on the Christian CampusRachel Engler0Columbia University This paper examines the idea of architectural style on evangelical Christian campuses built during the Cold War, a period during which religious cosmologies came into contact with the prospect of nuclear disaster, allowing for a temporary alliance between secular and religious visions of the end of human history. In this context of Cold War-era end-of-the-world thinking, and in relation to the biblical anticipation of the apocalypse, I consider the contrasting choices of so-called futuristic and neo-vernacular idioms in the building projects of television evangelists. What does it mean to revive styles of the past, or to build in a mode oriented toward the future, when the end of history is imminent? Design undertaken within the framework of assumed apocalyptic narratives troubles notions of permanence and durability—historically vital terms for thinking about building. The paper takes two primary case studies: Robertson’s Regent University in Virginia Beach, which hosts the Christian Broadcasting Network and was built in a “Jeffersonian” vernacular; and Oral Roberts’s Tulsa university, unique at the time for its gilded modernism. https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/footprint/article/view/6132
spellingShingle Rachel Engler
End Times and Architectural Style on the Christian Campus
Footprint
title End Times and Architectural Style on the Christian Campus
title_full End Times and Architectural Style on the Christian Campus
title_fullStr End Times and Architectural Style on the Christian Campus
title_full_unstemmed End Times and Architectural Style on the Christian Campus
title_short End Times and Architectural Style on the Christian Campus
title_sort end times and architectural style on the christian campus
url https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/footprint/article/view/6132
work_keys_str_mv AT rachelengler endtimesandarchitecturalstyleonthechristiancampus