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What is significant? The first church on the site was a timber building erected in 1892.
The extension of the Hawthorn tram line to Burwood in 1916 increased
congregation numbers, however the suburban area was not extensively
developed until after World War 2. Two proposals for a larger church
building were submitted by established church architects Louis
Williams in 1941 and Wystan Widdows in 1953. The latter design was
accepted by the church, however it was subsequently rejected in favour
of the contemporary and radical design by Mockridge Stahle and
Mitchell. This radical design was initially rejected by the Diocese. Mockridge Stahle and Mitchell, with John Mockridge as the principal
designer, was a prominent architectural firm established in Melbourne
in 1948, and was particularly well known for its designs for churches,
schools and university buildings. At St Faith's the architects adopted
a circular plan as a symbol of eternity and unity. The sanctuary end
was extended in a triangular form, and a curved narthex, side chapel
and baptistery were added to the basic circular form. The resulting
broad nave enabled good sight lines, while the circular form conveyed
a feeling of unity and intimacy. The resultant plan has been likened
to the form of a fish; an early Christian symbol. Contrasting materials were used in the church which is constructed
with a steel frame, walls of pale brick and feature stonework, slate
roof and a large central pre-fabricated copper-clad spire. Interior
finishes are simple with white walls and ceilings, timber acoustic
battens, and a grey vinyl tiled floor. A large central lantern, with
coloured glass, lights the nave (the original light diffuser has been
removed), roof domes light the altar and bold geometric stained glass
windows light the side chapels. The architects also designed the
church furniture including the pulpit, pews, lecterns, altar and
rails, chairs, tables and candlesticks. Parishioner Esther Harris
designed and produced glass and enamel panels containing apostolic
symbols for the narthex doors in 1961-62. A pipe organ was installed
and dedicated in 1978 and a font was placed in the centre of the
church in 1991.
How is it significant?
Why is it significant? St Faith's Anglican Church, Glen Iris is of aesthetic significance
for its simple, boldly lit interior and its stained glass, furniture
and fittings which were designed by the architects of the church,
Mockridge Stahle and Mitchell. This intact assemblage of meticulously
detailed, modern timber church furniture and fittings is highly
significant. The symbolic glass and enamel panels, placed in the
narthex doors in 1961-62, are also of note. St Faith's Anglican Church, Glen Iris is of historical significance
as an illustration of the combination of new architectural and
religious thinking which enabled the traditional forms of church
building in Victoria to be challenged. It reflects the growing
interest in the interaction between the clergy and the congregation in
the church setting in the late 1950s and 1960s and provides
anearly and innovative illustration of the effect this had on
ecclesiastical design in Victoria.
St Faith's Anglican Church, designed by architects Mockridge
Stahle and Mitchell, was built in 1957-58 on a site purchased by the
Anglican Diocese in Burwood in 1891. The design, by a young Melbourne
architectural firm, is an early modern building of striking simplicity
and innovative form, influenced by churches of post-war Europe. The
church contains a collection of well executed modern fittings and
furniture, and stained glass windows, designed by the architects of
the church.
St Faith's Anglican Church, Glen Iris is of architectural,
aesthetic and historical significance to the state of Victoria.
St Faith's Anglican Church, Glen Iris is of architectural
significance as a highly innovative ecclesiastical design and one of
the first truly modern church buildings in Victoria. It is notable for
its circular plan, first used by Roy Grounds in the 1950s and
subsequently adopted for a range of building types, including later
buildings by Mockridge Stahle and Mitchell such as Whitley College,
Parkville (1962-65) and the Religious Centre, Monash University
(1967-68 VHR H2188). It is of architectural significance as a fine,
innovative work of the prominent architects Mockridge Stahle and
Mitchell and has always been well regarded as a highly significant
work by the architectural profession.
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