Mendoza Argentina

Mendoza Argentina Temple Wiki

Quick Facts

ANNOUNCED
7 October 2018

ANNOUNCED BY
President Russell M. Nelson

GROUNDBREAKING
17 December 2020

GROUNDBREAKING PRESIDED BY
Elder Allen D. Haynie

DEDICATED
22 September 2024

DEDICATED BY
Elder Ronald A. Rasband


DEDICATION ORDER
197

LOCATION
Dr. E. Coni 2201
CP 5539  Ciudad de Mendoza, Mendoza
Argentina

Additional Facts

#1

fact 1

#2

fact 2

#3

fact 3

Description

History

In 1925, the early days of the Church in South America, Elder Melvin J. Ballard of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles dedicated South America for the preaching of the restored gospel. He shared that the Church in South America would grow slowly at first but become increasingly stronger over time, like the growth from a small acorn into a mighty oak tree.

Argentina reached membership of about 481,500 by the end of 2023, at the time making it the fourth-most members for a country in South America and the seventh-most worldwide. Elder Costa shared, “Looking into the next 100 years, the coming of temples will continue building generations of covenant-keeping Saints, helping our Heavenly Father gather Israel on both sides of the veil.”

Announcement

The Mendoza Argentina Temple was announced by President Russell M. Nelson on 7 October 2018, at the conclusion of the General Conference.

Argentina Temples at the time of Announcement

Announced

Under Construction

Dedicated

ANNOUNCED ORDER
190

Date2018 10 07
ByRussell M. Nelson
RolePresident
ViaGeneral Conference

⮜Preceded by Russia
Followed by Salvador Brazil

Location Announcement [Site Selection]

On June 23, 2020, the location of the Mendoza Argentina Temple was announced. The temple would be constructed in the Champagnat neighborhood on the western edge of the beautiful suburb of Las Heras, a community that borders Mendoza to the north.[1]”Rendering Released for Mendoza Argentina Temple,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 23 Jun. 2020

Render Released

On June 23, 2020, an official exterior rendering of the Mendoza Argentina Temple was released. The temple would be a single-story building of approximately 21,000 square feet. Plans also called for the construction of a on-site meetinghouse and arrival center. The single-spire temple was designed with classical proportions chosen to complement the Mendoza region. The art glass windows would feature the jarilla flower, which is native to the region.[2]”Rendering Released for Mendoza Argentina Temple,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 23 Jun. 2020

Groundbreaking Announced

The groundbreaking ceremony for the Mendoza Argentina Temple was announced on 2 October 2020 for November 2020. Likely due to COVID restrictions, no specific date was annouunced, just the month. Church leaders will break ground under the leadership of Elder Allen D. Haynie of the South America South Area presidency. The 21,000-square-foot temple will be built along Avenida Champagnat in the community of Las Heras. Plans also call for a meetinghouse and patron housing to be constructed on site. Ground will be broken in the same month for both the Mendoza Argentina Temple and the Salta Argentina Temple.[3]”Groundbreakings Announced for Two South American Temples,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 2 Oct. 2020.

The Announcement was made in conjunction with the groundbreaking announcement for the Antofagasta Chile Temple.

Groundbreaking

On Thursday, December 17, 2020, Elder Allen D. Haynie, First Counselor in the South America South Area Presidency, presided at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Mendoza Argentina Temple, which had been delayed several weeks. In his remarks, he stated, “Everything in the temple teaches us about Christ and about His central role in God’s plan for our happiness.” The sacred structure would be built in the community of Las Heras on Avenida Champagnat along with a meetinghouse and patron housing. Sister Deborah Haynie, Elder Haynie’s wife, directed her remarks to the youth. “Learn more about family history work for the next few years and fall in love with it. If you do that, when the temple’s doors open, you can help carry out ordinances on their behalf.”[4]”Andes Mountains Serve as Backdrop to Groundbreaking for Mendoza Argentina Temple,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 17 Dec. 2020.

GROUNDBREAKING ORDER
203

Date2020 12 17
ByAllen D. Haynie
RoleSeventy
Attendees##

⮜Preceded by Harare Zimbabwe
Followed by Deseret Peak Utah

Open House/Dedication announced

On 15 April 2024 the First Presidency released the open house and dedication dates for the Mendoza Argentina and Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Temples. The groundbreaking ceremony for the Cleveland Ohio Temple was additionally scheduled. The location is available for the Kananga Democratic Republic of the Congo Temple.[5]”Open House, Dedication and Groundbreaking Dates for Temples in Argentina, Ohio, and Pennsylvania,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 15 Apr. 2024.

Open House

A media day was held on Monday, August 19, followed by tours for invited guests on Tuesday and Wednesday, August 20–21, 2024.

A public open house for the Mendoza Argentina Temple was held from Thursday, August 22, through Saturday, September 7, 2024, excluding Sundays. Approximately 40,000 guests toured the temple in that time.

Start Date2024 08 22
End Date2024 09 07
Days11
Attendees40,000
Per day3,636.4

Dedication

On Sunday, 22 September 2024, nearly 100 years after the beginnings of preaching the restored gospel in the continent, Elder Ronald A. Rasband of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles dedicated the Mendoza temple, the fourth house of the Lord in Argentina and the 197th worldwide.Elder Rasband shared a principle about covenants that President Russell M. Nelson — then president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles — taught in the April 2017 general conference:
“We … increase the Savior’s power in our lives when we make sacred
covenants and keep those covenants with precision. Our covenants bind us
to Him and give us godly power.” Elder Rasband added, “In the years
ahead, we will need that power. We will need to be bold in our
testimonies, not just in what we say but how we live.”The Apostle was accompanied to Mendoza for the dedication by his wife, Sister Melanie Rasband; Elder Joaquin E. Costa, a General Authority Seventy and president of the South America South Area, and his wife, Sister Renee Costa; and Elder Kevin R. Duncan, a General Authority Seventy and executive director of the Church’s Temple Department.

At the time of the Mendoza temple dedication the Bahía Blanca Argentina Temple had been under construction since its April 2022 groundbreaking, and the Buenos Aires City Center and Rosario temples in planning and design.

DEDICATION ORDER
197

Date2024 09 22
ByRonald A. Rasband
RoleApostle
Sessions2
Attendees#

⮜Preceded by Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
Followed by San Pedro Sula Honduras

Dedicatory Prayer

Construction Duration

SpanDuration
Announced
to
Groundbreaking
– y,
– m,
– d
Groundbreaking
to
Dedication
– y,
– m,
-d
Announced
to
Dedication
– y,
– m,
– d

Dedicatory Order

GLOBAL

197

REGION
S. AM.
27

COUNTRY
ARGENTINA
4

STATE


COUNTY


CITY
MENDOZA
1

Summary

The Mendoza Argentina Temple was the fourth temple built in Argentina, following the Buenos Aires Argentina Temple (1986), the Córdoba Argentina Temple (2015), and the Salta Argentina Temple (2024).

Detail

Groundbreaking Announced

Announced

Presidents and Matrons

Temple PresidentTemple MatronYears Served
Rubén Sabatino TideiMaria Matilde Calvo Tidei2024–

Details

Location

Site

Plans also call for the construction of a on-site meetinghouse and patron housing facility.

Location

address

Latitude#
Longitude#

Phone

phone

Elevation

FeetMeters
##

Site

AcresHectares
##

Exterior

The Mendoza Argentina Temple will be a single-story building of approximately 21,000 square feet.

Cladding

text

Water Course
Windows

text

Spandrel panel

Exterior Finish

text

Architectural Features

text

FeetMeters
Height##
To Shoulder##
Width##
Length##
Footprint##
HeadingCalc

Symbolism

Inscription

text

text

Order
Location
Language
Type
Color
Setting
Font
Glyph
Church Name
Temple Name
Dates
Cornerstone

text

text

Location
Faces
Material
Set
Edge
Type
Finish
Language

Spires and Finial

Spires

text

Spire Details

Spires#
Location#
Finish#
Typedome, steeple, tower, spire
shape#
Tower shape
Finial

text

Finial Details

Material#
Placed#
Finish#
Height#
Weight#

Interior

[multi-interior version]

text

text

Entry

text

Area– f2
(- m2)
Floors above grade
Floors below Grade
Baptistries
Initiatories
Endowment Rooms
Sealing Rooms
Baptistry

text

Baptistries:1
Location:Center
Exterior Windows:No
Artwork:No
Artwork Type:none
Oxen:12
Type:1/4
Hoof:Visible
Color:Brass
Layout:3 spread each at Compass
Font Exterior:Precast
Interior:Gray Tile
Shape:Octagon
Bowl Shape:Square
Pillar:Reeds
Stairs:Dual, Opposing
Font Well:Exterior
Initiatory Spaces

text

Styledetached, attached, combined
Typestationary, progressive
Rooms#
*Estimated
Instruction Rooms

text

Creation Room

text-images

Garden Room

text-images

World Room

text-images

Terrestrial Room

text-images

Rooms#
Type#
Capacity#
Muralsy/n
Total Muraled Rooms#
Mural Type
*Estimated
Celestial Room

text-images

Sealing Room

text-images

Sealing Rooms
Largest Capacity

Contractors

Architect

[with additional version]

text

Projects by Architect

Project Manager

[without additional version]

text

General Contractor

text

Other Contractor

contractor and position

Region

Argentina7Bahía Blanca · Buenos Aires Argentina · Buenos Aires City Center · Córdoba · Mendoza · Rosario · Salta
Bolivia3Cochabamba · La Paz · Santa Cruz
Brazil24Belém · Belo Horizonte · Brasília · Campinas · Campo Grande · Curitiba · Florianópolis · Fortaleza · Goiânia · João Pessoa · Londrina · Maceió · Manaus · Natal · Porto Alegre · Recife · Ribeirão Preto · Rio de Janeiro · Salvador · Santos · São Paulo · São Paulo East · Teresina · Vitória
Chile6Antofagasta · Concepción · Puerto Montt · Santiago · Santiago West · Viña del Mar
Colombia4Barranquilla · Bogotá · Cali · Medellín
Ecuador2Guayaquil · Quito
Paraguay1Asunción
Peru10Arequipa · Chiclayo · Chorrillos · Cusco · Huancayo · Iquitos · Lima · Lima Los Olivos · Piura · Trujillo
Uruguay2Montevideo · Rivera
Venezuela2Caracas · Maricaibo

Sources and Citations

References

References
1, 2 ”Rendering Released for Mendoza Argentina Temple,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 23 Jun. 2020
3 ”Groundbreakings Announced for Two South American Temples,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 2 Oct. 2020.
4 ”Andes Mountains Serve as Backdrop to Groundbreaking for Mendoza Argentina Temple,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 17 Dec. 2020.
5 ”Open House, Dedication and Groundbreaking Dates for Temples in Argentina, Ohio, and Pennsylvania,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 15 Apr. 2024.

Last updated on: 30 August 2025