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Emmanuel Episcopal Church (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)

Emmanuel Episcopal Church
Emmanuel Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh, rear and western side.jpg
Emmanuel Episcopal Church
Emmanuel Episcopal Church (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is located in Pittsburgh
Emmanuel Episcopal Church (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
Emmanuel Episcopal Church (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is located in Pennsylvania
Emmanuel Episcopal Church (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
Emmanuel Episcopal Church (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is located in the US
Emmanuel Episcopal Church (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
Location 957 W. North Ave., Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Coordinates 40°27′11″N 80°1′10″W / 40.45306°N 80.01944°W / 40.45306; -80.01944Coordinates: 40°27′11″N 80°1′10″W / 40.45306°N 80.01944°W / 40.45306; -80.01944
Area 0.5 acres (0.20 ha)
Built 1886
Architect Henry Hobson Richardson
Architectural style Romanesque Revival, Richardsonian Romanesque
NRHP Reference # 74001737
Significant dates
Added to NRHP May 3, 1974
Designated NHL February 16, 2000
Designated CPHS February 22, 1977
Designated PHLF 1968

Emmanuel Episcopal Church, Pittsburgh, is an active parish of the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh. It is known for offering a Sunday evening service of Jazz Vespers. Its 1886 church building is known for its architectural features and was one of the last designs by Henry Hobson Richardson. It was declared a National Historic Landmark in 2000.

Though brick was selected for reasons of economy, the brickwork is one of the church’s most striking features. Unlike most of Richardson's buildings, Emmanuel Episcopal’s wall surfaces have fairly plain surfaces. They do not have a rough surface, moldings, belt courses or other projections to break up the planes or produce shadow lines, though the bricks do project from the main wall surface just below the eave line in two steps of different dimension to give a pleasing string course effect. Stone is used only as sills for the windows, and springing from the three entrance arches and where the foundation is exposed.

This simplicity is relieved, in part, by patterning the brickwork. Of particular note, the repetitive triangular pattern at the roofline is called “mousetooth.” The brick patterning gives the impression of finely woven fabric. The sharply incised windows and doors produce dramatic voids.

One of the best known features of Emmanuel Episcopal Church is a mistake. The lower section of the side wall is intended to slope inward as it rises (this is called battering). The upper wall outward slope started to take place shortly after construction. Richardson died a month after the church's dedication so his former employees, Longfellow, Alden & Harlow, were hired but they were unsuccessful in pinpointing the cause. However, when the firm added the parish house to the far side of the church, the slope stopped increasing.

The building's is located at 957 West North Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania at the corner of Allegheny Avenue on the North Side of Pittsburgh. This area was part of the City of Allegheny until 1907 when it was annexed by Pittsburgh and renamed the North Side.

In 1867 Emmanuel Episcopal Church began as a mission fulfilling the need for a Sunday school for the children of English workmen. At first it met in homes and then in rented rooms. Membership grew to 76 people in 1868 when they received a church charter. The next year they built a frame church.

By 1875 the area became fashionable and the frame church became too small. The building committee was formed in 1882 with Postmaster Malcolm Hay as chairman. The land for the new church was purchased for $750 in 1883. H. H. Richardson was selected as the architect at the same time he was designing Pittsburgh's Allegheny County Courthouse and Jail in January, 1884. The church was dedicated in March, 1886.


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