Church of Scientology plans church in Arcadia neighborhood of Phoenix

The Church of Scientology International is opening a 45,000-square-foot church in the Arcadia neighborhood of east Phoenix as part of an ongoing effort to expand the church’s presence worldwide.

Spokeswoman Erin Banks said since the global expansion began about five years ago, the organization has opened more than 20 new churches, including churches in Cincinnati, Sacramento and Hamburg, Germany, in the last three months.

The new Phoenix church will occupy the former Fairmount Square office site at 3875 N. 44th St.

The church’s only other location in Phoenix, at 1002 N. Third St. in downtown, was established in 1974. There is another Arizona location in Tucson.

“These new openings greatly expand our ability to minister to our parishioners and the communities where they live,” Banks said.

The city of Phoenix has approved the church’s request for a permit to remodel the building and occupy it.

The Church of Scientology is remodeling the office building, located on about 2 acres. It will include a chapel, library, cafeteria, rooms for seminars and classes, as well as dozens of rooms for spiritual counseling, which the organization calls auditing.

It also includes a public-information center, where visitors can learn about the church’s beliefs and practices, as well as its founder and creator, the late L. Ron Hubbard.

Banks said the remodeling could be completed by the end of the year.

The church estimates there are 5,000 to 6,000 members in Arizona.

Banks described Scientology as a religion that offers a path to one’s “true spiritual nature.”

“This includes a path to one’s relationship to self, family, groups, mankind, all life forms, the material universe, the spiritual universe and the supreme being,” she said.

Part of the church’s outreach will include a human-rights initiative, a drug-abuse prevention and rehabilitation program, as well as literacy and learning centers, she said.

“We expect to work closely with other like-minded groups and individuals in the community,” she said. “With this new facility we will be able to bring even more to the community.”

The Church of Scientology has attracted increased attention in recent years because of its celebrity members, including Tom Cruise and John Travolta.

Hubbard, a science-fiction writer who published the self-help book “Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health,” made the Arcadia area his home from 1952 to 1955, living not far from the site of the new church. During that time, he authored the first books about Scientology and gave hundreds of lectures about the religion, Banks said.

While living in Phoenix, Hubbard established the first Scientology organization, the Hubbard Association of Scientologists International, in 1952. For many years it served as the principal Scientology organization, a role now filled by the Church of Scientology International, Banks said.

“Phoenix is a very significant city in the development of Dianetics and Scientology,” she said. “In Phoenix, Hubbard wrote the Scientology codes and creeds and laid down its philosophical bedrock.”

Hubbard moved from Phoenix to Washington, D.C., in March 1955.

Scientology Offers Open House For New Downtown Sacramento Building

SACRAMENTO (CBS13) — After its grand opening over the weekend, the Church of Scientology offered the media a closer look at its new Sacramento location on Monday after a transition that took eight years to complete.

They took great care to preserve the exterior facade of the historic building on J and 6th streets. Inside it’s completely different, gutted and renovated from top to bottom.

The building, formerly the Ramona Hotel, is six stories and 58,000 square feet.

“It’s a big difference. We were definitely outgrowing old space,” the church’s Mike Klagenberg said of the move from Scientology’s previous location at 15th and I.

The information center on the ground floor is where walk-ins can ask questions and watch videos. The chapel is just off the reception area. Quotes from Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard cover the walls.

A library and classrooms are on the next floors up, and individual meeting rooms for counseling are on the fifth floor, where this device called an e-meter is used.

The device is used “to help members locate moments of trauma or stress … as a guide,” church member Erin Banks said.

The church calls this one of just 27 full-featured, so called “ideal” Scientology churches in the world. It will serve the area’s 12,000 members here.

 

Scientologists have a new church

By Jennifer Garza
jgarza@sacbee.com

Published: Tuesday, Jan. 31, 2012 – 12:00 am | Page 2B

It took two years and about $10 million, but the 12,000 local members of the Church of Scientology in Sacramento have a new house of worship.

The new Church of Scientology of Sacramento is a seven-story building at the site of the Old Ramona Hotel on the corner of Sixth and J streets. Inside can be found a chapel, multiple seminar rooms, classrooms, dozens of rooms for auditing or spiritual counseling, a bookstore and a cafe.

It has a Purification Center with treadmills and saunas. At the center, members can work off the mental and spiritual effects of drugs, said Erin Banks, spokeswoman for the Church of Scientology International. “This is where people can sweat out drugs, toxins, and pesticides that can affect you,” Banks said. “It opens the way to spiritual progress.”

The church was paid for by local donations, she said.

Monday, Victor Yang was one of many visitors who stopped by and looked at the TV monitors that were running video explaining Scientology. “I wanted to see what it was all about,” he said.

Church officials said they expect about 25,000 annual visitors to the downtown church.

 

Scientologists open new church at 6th and J streets

By Jennifer Garza
jgarza@sacbee.com

Visitors are invited to see the new 57,000-square-foot Church of Scientology of Sacramento at Sixth and J streets.

Church officials held a grand opening Saturday. The facility is at the Old Ramona Hotel, which has been renovated.

More than 2,400 people attended, including Mayor Kevin Johnson, who said the restored building will help revitalize downtown.

The new church will serve 12,000 members locally.

It has a chapel for congregational gatherings, Sunday services and religious ceremonies. There are also seminar rooms, classrooms and rooms for Scientology auditing (spiritual counseling).

“This gives us a way to introduce the city of Sacramento to our church so they can learn what Scientology is really about,” said Gail Gallegos, public relations director for the Church of Scientology in Sacramento.  ”We have lots of social betterment programs that are a big part of the community.”