New site set to house choir
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Deirdre Newman
If Rock Harbor Church had a theme song, it would be “Don’t Fence Me
In.”
The music-loving congregation is holding its inaugural services
this weekend in its new facility on Fischer Avenue, but church
members don’t want their first permanent site to limit their outreach
to the community.
“If anything scares us, it’s the idea of being contained and being
boxed in as a church,” lead pastor Todd Proctor said. “We’re looking
at this building being more of a launching pad for our ministry than
a place where we hold people in.”
The new building was a beehive of activity Friday as members and
construction workers scurried around preparing the place for its
opening service tonight. One church member anointed the doors to the
sanctuary, which will hold about 1,000 people.
Rock Harbor members have been gypsies since the nondenominational
church was founded seven years ago as an offshoot of Mariners Church
in Irvine. Leaders conducted services, with the accompaniment of a
contemporary worship band, at the Costa Mesa Senior Center since 1997
and at Vineyard Newport since 2003. Average weekly attendance at the
church services are about 2,800 spread among a service on Saturday
night and three on Sundays, communications director Jen Mulroney
said.
The City Council in January gave its blessing to the church’s use
of an industrial building at 345 Fischer Ave. The church is leasing
the 35,000-square-foot, former warehouse and spent $1.9 million
renovating it. It has received temporary occupancy permits for this
weekend’s services. Proctor anticipated getting the final permits in
the next week.
The fundraising and a large portion of the construction effort
were achieved by church members -- praying, donating money and
rolling up their sleeves and pitching in with the remodel, Mulroney
said. Some of the results of that work are the office cubicles,
cabinets and shelves now in the new building.
“We’ve had hundreds of volunteers working furiously to get us
across the finish line, and we’re so thankful we can meet here this
weekend,” Proctor said. “Our volunteer efforts will resume over the
next two days to finish.”
In typical Rock Harbor fashion, the sanctuary does not have pews
nailed into the floor. Instead, chairs will be moved in and out of
the nearly 7,000-square-foot worship area depending on the need,
Mulroney said.
“We want to be available to move and respond in whatever way we
feel led by God,” Mulroney said. “We’re trying not to be permanent
but still have a permanent place.”
A multipurpose room is to the side of the sanctuary and will be
used as a theater and for overflow seating during crowded services.
The ceiling of the lobby will be adorned with a mural. The lobby will
also contain a memorial to the church’s volunteers, including Doug
Root, a founding elder of the church and part of the team that
searched for a permanent building. Root passed away in July.
The hall connecting the sanctuary with the offices will become an
art gallery, Mulroney said. The new facility is also kid-friendly,
with nine children’s classrooms decorated in whimsical, colorful
designs.
The entire fundraising project for the building also included
$970,000 for replenishing the church’s fund for future facilities and
$370,000 to donate to churches and church-related organizations
around the world, which also have building needs.
“We feel called to give 11% of what’s given to us,” Mulroney said.
“I feel like if we’re getting blessed, the least we can do is give
some of it away.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers government. She may be reached at (714)
966-4623 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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