San Salvador El Salvador

San Salvador El Salvador Temple Wiki

Quick Facts

ANNOUNCED
18 November 2007

ANNOUNCED BY
First Presidency

GROUNDBREAKING
20 September 2008

GROUNDBREAKING PRESIDED BY
Don R. Clarke

DEDICATED
21 August 2011

DEDICATED BY
Elder Henry B. Eyring


DEDICATION ORDER
135

LOCATION
Avenida El Espino y Calle El Pedregal
Colonia San Benito
CP  Antiguo Cuscatlán, La Libertad
El Salvador

Description

History

Announcement

In a letter to priesthood leaders dated November 7, 2007, the First Presidency has announced the construction of a temple in San Salvador, El Salvador. The presidency noted the blessing this temple will be to the many faithful Saints of the San Salvador area who currently travel long distances to participate in temple ordinances.[1]Gordon B. Hinckley, Thomas S. Monson, and Henry B. Eyring, The First Presidency, to General Authorities and the following leaders in the Central America Area: Area Seventies; selected Stake, Mission, and District Presidents; selected Bishops and Branch Presidents, “Construction of a Temple in San Salvador, El Salvador,” 7 November 2007.; Morales, Chris. “New Temple for El Salvador.” Church News, 11 Jan. 2024, www.thechurchnews.com/2007/11/24/23232365/new-temple-for-el-salvador.

ANNOUNCED ORDER
138

Date2007 11 07
ByFirst Presidency
Role
ViaLocal Letter

⮜Preceded by Manaus Brazil
Followed by Gilbert Arizona

Groundbreaking

Despite the rainy weather, a warm spirit was felt by all who were privileged to be in attendance at the groundbreaking ceremony for the San Salvador El Salvador Temple held Saturday, September 20, 2008. Elder Don R. Clarke of the Seventy, president of the Central America Area, presided at the services. He was accompanied by his counselors, Elder Shirley D. Christensen and Elder Enrique R. Falabella, as well as Carlos F. Rivas, an Area Seventy. Those invited to participate included stake presidents, bishops, and their families.[2]Josue Peña, “Templo de San Salvador,” Email to Rick Satterfield, 22 Sept. 2008.

text

GROUNDBREAKING ORDER
136

Date2008 09 20
ByDon R. Clarke
RoleSeventy
Attendees##

⮜Preceded by Manaus Brazil
Followed by The Gila Valley Arizona

Render Released

Along with the groundbreaking Ceremony, a new render was released for the temple

[alternate to construction detail]

Open House

The public was invited to visit the temple during an open house from Friday, 1 July 2011, until Saturday, 23 July 2011, excluding Sundays. Public tours were scheduled for Mondays from 9:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and Tuesdays through Saturdays from 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. It was reported that 165,790 people toured the temple during the open house. The temple open house included visits from a variety of Salvadoran government and cultural leaders. Almost 200 government officials toured the temple along with 27 representatives from other religions. Hundreds of local business leaders along with some 50 media members were also counted among the visitors.

Start Date2011 07 01
End Date2011 07 23
Days20
Attendees165,790
Per day8,289.5

Dedication

President Henry B. Eyring, first counselor in the First Presidency, dedicated the San Salvador El Salvador Temple on Aug. 21, 2011. “It is a remarkable building,” he said after the last of three dedicatory sessions. “And the Spirit was so evident that it’s hard to adequately describe.”

Also at the event was Elder D. Todd Christofferson of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. He said, “I feel the temple will have a positive impact in every sense — economic, spiritual and social — for El Salvador.” He then added that the temple will open “new horizons” for developing the area.

DEDICATION ORDER
135

Date2011 08 21
ByHenry B. Eyring
Role1st Counselor
Sessions3
Attendees#

⮜Preceded by Kyiv Ukraine
Followed by Quetzaltenango Guatemala

Dedicatory Prayer

Construction Duration

SpanDuration
Announced
to
Groundbreaking
10 y,
0 m,
2 d
Groundbreaking
to
Dedication
2 y,
11 m,
1 d
Announced
to
Dedication
3 y,
9 m,
3 d

Dedicatory Order

GLOBAL

135

REGION
N. AM.
88

COUNTRY
EL SALVADOR
1

STATE
DEP. LA LIBERTAD
1

COUNTY


CITY
ANTIGUO CUSCATLÁN
1

Summary

quick numbers on dedication order

Detail

Groundbreaking Announced

  • text
  • text

Announced

  • text
  • text

Dedication Announced

  • text
  • text

Under Construction

  • text
  • text

Rededication Announced

  • text
  • text

Under Renovation

  • text
  • text

Renovation Scheduled

  • text
  • text

Presidents and Matrons

Temple PresidentTemple MatronYears Served
Emigdio Tiberio Santos JimenezMaria Olimpia Portillo Chavez de Santos2023–2023
Randy Jay HarrisDonna Clara Dodge Harris2020–2023
Alonso de Jesus Figueroa MorenoSilvia Margarita Quijano de Figueroa2017–2020
Luis Gerardo Chaverri MadrigalJulieta de los Ángeles León Vargas de Chaverri2014–2017
Walter Ray PetersenEileen Marie Albertson Petersen2011–2014

Details

Location

The temple is on a 6.5-acre plot,[3]“San Salvador El Salvador Temple | ChurchofJesusChristTemples.org”. Temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Retrieved 2024-10-28. with surrounding landscaping of palm trees and tropical bushes.[4]“San Salvador El Salvador Temple”. Church News. Retrieved 2024-10-28. The exterior has “arches and conches inside and out, giving it a Spanish colonial touch found in the San Salvador region.”[5]“San Salvador El Salvador Temple”. Church News. Retrieved 2024-10-28.

Site

Location

address

Latitude#
Longitude#

Phone

phone

Elevation

FeetMeters
##

Site

AcresHectares
##

Exterior

Cladding

It is constructed with Branco Sienna granite.

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

The temple has a single attached center spire with a statue of the angel Moroni at the top.

Spire Details

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

text

Finish:
Placed:
Faces:

Interior

text

text

Entry

text

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

text

Baptistries:
Location:
Exterior Windows:
Artwork:
Artwork Type:
Oxen:
Type:
Hoof:
Color:
Layout:
Font Exterior:
Interior:
Shape:
Bowl Shape:
Pillar:
Stairs:
Font Well:
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

Canada11Calgary · Cardston · Edmonton · Halifax · Lethbridge · Montreal · Regina · Toronto · Vancouver · Victoria · Winnipeg
Costa Rica1San José
Dominican Republic1Santiago · Santo Domingo
El Salvador1San Salvador · Santa Ana
Guatemala6Cobán · Guatemala City · Huehuetenango · Miraflores Monterrey · Guatemala City · Quetzaltenango · Retalhuleu
Haiti1Port-au-Prince ·
Honduras2Tegucigalpa · San Pedro Sula
Mexico27Cancún · Chihuahua · Ciudad Juárez · Colonia Juárez · Cuernavaca · Culiacan · Guadalajara · Hermosillo Sonora · Juchitán de Zaragoza · Merida · Mexico City Benemerito · Mexico City · Monterrey · Oaxaca · Pachuca · Puebla · Querétaro · Reynosa · San Luis Potosi · Tampico · Tijuana · Toluca · Torreon · Tula · Tuxtla Gutierrez · Veracruz · Villahermosa
Nicaragua1Managua
Panama1Panama City
Puerto Rico1San Juan
United States158Albuquerque · Anchorage · Atlanta · Austin · Bakersfield · Baton Rouge · Bentonville · Billings · Birmingham · Bismarck · Boise · Boston · Bountiful · Brigham City · Burley · Caldwell · Casper · Cedar City · Charlotte · Chicago · Cincinnati · Cleveland · Cody · Coeur d’Alene · Colorado Springs · Columbia · Columbia River · Columbus · Dallas · Denver · Des Moines · Deseret Peak · Detroit · Draper · El Paso · Elko · Ephraim · Fairbanks · Fairview · Farmington · Feather River · Flagstaff · Fort Collins · Fort Lauderdale · Fort Worth · Fresno · The Gila Valley · Gilbert · Grand Junction · Grand Rapids · Greenville · Harrisburg · Hartford · Heber Valley · Helena · Honolulu · Houston South · Houston · Huntsville · Idaho Falls · Indianapolis · Jacksonville · Jordan River · Kahului · Kansas City · Knoxville · Kona · Laie · Las Vegas · Layton · Lehi · Lindon · Logan · Lone Mountain · Los Angeles · Louisville · Lubbock · Manhattan · Manti · McAllen · Medford · Memphis · Meridian · Mesa · Milwaukee · Missoula · Modesto · Monticello · Montpelier · Moses Lake · Mount Timpanogos · Nashville · Nauvoo · Newport · Norfolk · Oakland · Ogden · Oklahoma City · Oquirrh Mountain · Orem · Orlando · Palmyra · Payson · Philadelphia · Phoenix · Pittsburgh · Pocatello · Portland M · Portland O · Price · Provo City Center · Provo Rock Canyon · Queen Creek · Raleigh · Rapid City · Red Cliffs · Redlands · Reno · Rexburg · Richmond · Roanoke · Sacramento · Salt Lake · San Antonio · San Diego · San Jose · Saratoga Springs · Seattle · Smithfield · Snowflake · Spanish Fork · Spokane · Springfield · St. George · St. Louis · St. Paul · Star Valley · Summit · Syracuse · Tacoma · Tallahassee · Tampa · Taylorsville · Teton River · Tucson · Tulsa · Twin Falls · Vancouver · Vernal · Washington D.C. · West Jordan · Wichita · Willamette Valley · Winchester · Winter Quarters · Yorba Linda · Yuma

Sources and Citations

References

References
1 Gordon B. Hinckley, Thomas S. Monson, and Henry B. Eyring, The First Presidency, to General Authorities and the following leaders in the Central America Area: Area Seventies; selected Stake, Mission, and District Presidents; selected Bishops and Branch Presidents, “Construction of a Temple in San Salvador, El Salvador,” 7 November 2007.; Morales, Chris. “New Temple for El Salvador.” Church News, 11 Jan. 2024, www.thechurchnews.com/2007/11/24/23232365/new-temple-for-el-salvador.
2 Josue Peña, “Templo de San Salvador,” Email to Rick Satterfield, 22 Sept. 2008.
3 “San Salvador El Salvador Temple | ChurchofJesusChristTemples.org”. Temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Retrieved 2024-10-28.
4, 5 “San Salvador El Salvador Temple”. Church News. Retrieved 2024-10-28.

Last updated on: 10 October 2025