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Church of the Holy Spirit dans l'Essonne

Essonne

Church of the Holy Spirit

    53 Boulevard Guynemer
    91170 Viry-Châtillon

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1935
Start of work
11 octobre 1936
Blessing of the Lower Chapel
1961
Resumption of work
4 avril 1964
Church Inauguration
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Anton Korady - Architect Designed the modern church in 1961-1964.
Maurice Calka - Sculptor Author of the tympanum bas-relief.
Monseigneur Roland-Gosselin - Bishop of Versailles Bless the low chapel in 1936.

Origin and history

The church of the Holy Spirit was born of an urgent need at the beginning of the 20th century: the influx of 4,000 inhabitants to Viry-Châtillon between 1920 and 1930 made the old church of Saint Denis insufficient. In 1935, the work of a temporary chapel began, but revealed an old Seine bed, requiring six months of pumping and exhausting the funds. The lower chapel, in a red mill and briquette, was blessed in 1936 by Monsignor Roland-Gosselin, bishop of Versailles, serving as a temporary place of worship.

The Second World War and financial difficulties interrupted the project until 1961. The architect Anton Korady then resumes the construction by merging old and modern: the stone and brick base supports a concrete and laminated-paste wood structure, inspired by the style of Le Corbusier. The re-use of the mill unifies both periods. The church was finally inaugurated on April 4, 1964, marking the culmination of nearly three decades of effort.

The building is distinguished by its concrete triangular bell tower (30 m) and its 33 steps staircase, evoking Lourdes. Inside, the cross nave houses translucent glass-wool windows, oak benches, and a copper and wood cross path. The tympanum, carved by Maurice Calka, represents the Holy Face framed by the symbols of the four Evangelists. The church thus embodies a synthesis between tradition and architectural modernity.

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