Columbia River Washington Temple Wiki

Quick Facts

ANNOUNCED
2 April 2000

ANNOUNCED BY
President Gordon B. Hinckley

GROUNDBREAKING
28 October 2000

GROUNDBREAKING PRESIDED BY
Elder Stephen A. West

DEDICATED
18 November 2001

DEDICATED BY
President Gordon B. Hinckley


DEDICATION ORDER
107

LOCATION
969 Gage Blvd
Richland, Washington 99352-7777
United States

Description

The Columbia River Temple serves 32,000 members in eastern Washington and northern Oregon. Because of the tremendous growth members of Mormon Church now enjoy the blessings of having three temples within their state. Seattle Washington, dedicated in 1980, was the first; with Spokane Washington coming 19 years later in 1999. A fourth temple was announced for Washington in Moses Lake.

History

Richland was a small town until the World War II era, when the U.S. Army bought the surrounding area to house the Manhattan Project workers. The area became known as the Hanford Site. The population of Richland rose from a mere 300 to thousands. The Columbia River provided support for agricultural production, allowing the area to flourish.

From 1946 onward, Church membership also continued to grow rapidly in the area. “The Church started out here with about the same number you can count on both hands,” said Bud Clement, a member who moved to the Tri-City area in 1946. [1]Swenson, Jason, “Peace, beauty find home in new temple,” Church News, 23 November 2001

The area’s first stake was organized in Richland in the 1950’s. Many of these early members became faithful temple goers, regularly attending the temple in Seattle when it was dedicated in 1980 and, more recently, Spokane, when it was dedicated just the year before the Columbia River Temple was announced.[2]Swenson, Jason, “Peace, beauty find home in new temple,” Church News, 23 November 2001

Church membership in Washington State has grown from 67,000 members in 1970 to nearly 230,000 in 2001.

Announcement

President Gordon B. Hinckley announced a temple for “somewhere in the Tri-Cities area of the state of Washington” on 2 April 2000, at the end of the Sunday afternoon Session of the 170th Annual General Conference. Others were announced at Aba Nigeria, Asunción Paraguay, Helsinki Finland, Lubbock Texas, and Snowflake Arizona[3]Hinckley, Gordon B.,“A Time of New Beginnings”, LDS.org, 2 April 2000. Accessed 11 November 2014.

Washington Temples at Time of Announcement

Announced

Under Construction

Dedicated

ANNOUNCED ORDER
120

Date2000 04 02
ByGordon B. Hinckley
RolePresident
ViaGeneral Conference

⮜Preceded by Snowflake Arizona
Followed by Sacramento California

Sometime after the announcement of the temple, the name of the temple was announced as the Columbia River Washington Temple.

Groundbreaking

The groundbreaking ceremony followed that same year. Stephen A. West, a member of the Second Quorum of the Seventy, who himself served as a missionary in the area many years before, presided at the groundbreaking ceremony of the temple on 28 October 2000. At that time he stated, “Our homes are where we become prepared to go to the temple. Carved over the temple door is the phrase, ‘The House of the Lord.’ Our houses should be homes where the Lord could be comfortable to visit. In the dedicatory prayer for the Kirtland Temple it was said?’establish a house, even a house of prayer, a house of fasting, a house of faith, a house of learning, a house of glory, a house of order, a house of God.’ May that be said of our homes as well.”[4]Harriet Sutherland (November 4, 2000), “Columbia River Washington Temple construction begins”, Church News, https://www.thechurchnews.com/2000/11/4/23245398/columbia-river-washington-temple-construction-begins/.

GROUNDBREAKING ORDER
112

Date2000 10 28
ByStephen A. West
RoleSeventy
Attendees#

⮜Preceded by Snowflake Arizona
Followed by Lubbock Texas

Construction

Following the groundbreaking, the work of construction immediately began. Fred Mahaffey, a subcontractor for the temple construction, used a backhoe to start digging where the baptismal font would eventually be built, directly after the event was over.

During the 18 months of the construction of the temple, thousands of visitors came from all over the future temple district to check on the construction progress. One construction worker on the temple said, “I’ve worked in this profession for many years, but I have never worked on a site where so many people come and take pictures of a building before it’s completed.”[5]Sutherland, Harriet “Temple inspires public,”Church News, 1 November 2001.

Open House

Prior to the Public open house, Elder Quentin L. Cook, then a member of the Seventy, along with Elder Lowell Barber, led privat tours for construction workrs, and temple contractors, along with their families; Nearby neighbors; local clergy; education, civic, and government leaders; and family history enthusiasts.[6]Sutherland, Harriet “Temple inspires public,”Church News, 1 November 2001.

300 of the Construction workers were given a personal copy of the Book of Mormon signed by the Temples, General Contractor, and the Temple’s project manager.[7]Sutherland, Harriet “Temple inspires public,”Church News, 1 November 2001.

After the VIP tours, and before the temple was dedicated it was opened to the public from 27 October through 10 November of 2001. Nearly 65,000 people visited the temple during the open house period.

Start Date2001 10 27
End Date2001 11 10
Days13
Attendees65,000
Per day5,000

Dedication

President Gordon B. Hinckley, prophet and president of the Church, dedicated the Columbia River Washington Temple on 18 November 2001 over 4 dedicatory sessions. During the dedicatory prayer President Hinckley prayed, “Thy grateful people have erected this house. It has been visited by many thousands. They have come out of curiosity and have left with appreciation. May their hearts be inclined to Thy work and may there grow within them a desire to learn of Thy revealed truth.” [8]”Dedicatory prayer: ‘The offering of our hearts and our hands,'” Church News, 24 Nov. 2001, 25 Jun. 2005 He also asked “that Thou wilt smile upon Thy people and their families. Open the windows of heaven and shower down blessings upon the faithful who contribute of their time and resources according to Thy will and law. May the whole earth become as Zion as Thy work spreads among the nations.”

It was dedicated exactly 21 years and one day after the Seattle Washington Temple, the state’s first, was dedicated.

DEDICATION ORDER
107

Date2001 11 18
ByGordon B. Hinckley
RolePresident
Sessions6
Attendees#

⮜Proceeded by Perth Australia
Followed by Snowflake Arizona

Dedicatory Prayer

Construction Duration

SpanDuration
Announced
to
Groundbreaking
0 y,
6 m,
25 d
Groundbreaking
to
Dedication
1 y,
0 m,
21 d
Announced
to
Dedication
1 y,
7 m,
16 d

Dedicatory Order

GLOBAL

#

REGION
region
#

COUNTRY
country
#

STATE
state
#

COUNTY
county
#

CITY
city
#

Summary

The Columbia River Washington Temple was is the 107th operating temple in the world, and the third temple built in Washington, following the Seattle Washington Temple (1980) and the Spokane Washington Temple (1999).

Detail

Announced

  • text
  • text

Under Construction

  • text
  • text

Under Renovation

  • text
  • text

Presidents

Temple PresidentYears Served
Brad K. Risenmay2019–2019
Marvin T. Brinkerhoff2016–2019
George E. Johnson2013–2016
T. Dean Moody2010–2013
Garth L. Tingey2007–2010
Earl J. Wheelwright2004–2007
Allan D. Alder2001–2004

Details

Location

Situated near the Columbia River in Richland, Washington, the Columbia River Washington Temple temple sits on a 2.88-acre site.

Site

The grounds have beautiful trees and flowers and a fountain that flows like a river over steps and culminates in a pool.

Location

Latitude#
Longitude#

Phone

Elevation

FeetMeters
##

Site

AcresHectares
##

Exterior

Patrons enter through a beautiful stone portico entrance that juts out from the main building.

Cladding

The exterior of the temple is finished with Bethel White Granite from Vermont and Italy.[9]Columbia River Washington Temple,” The Church News

Windows

Art-glass windows from Germany with intricate designs are embedded in the tiered spire and temple walls.

Exterior Finish

text

Architectural Features

text

Specifications

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

Interior

The Columbia River Washington Temple has a total of 16,880 square feet (1,568 m2), two ordinance rooms, and two sealing rooms. While walking through these rooms, patrons can marvel at the cherry woodwork, the chandeliers made of Czechoslovakian crystal and a rug from Thailand.

Entry
Area32,240 f2
(2,995.19 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

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

text-images

Sealing Room

text-images

Sealing Rooms
Largest Capacity

Interior

Individuals and Contractors

The project manager for the Columbia River Washington Temple was Bill Naylor. The General Contractor was Vitus Construction of Medford Oregon.[10]Columbia River Washington Temple,” The Church News

Region

Alabama2Birmingham · Huntsville
Alaska2Anchorage · Fairbanks
Arizona9Flagstaff · Gilbert · Mesa · Phoenix · Queen Creek · Snowflake · The Gila Valley · Tucson · Yuma
Arkansas1Bentonville
California12Bakersfield · Feather River · Fresno · Los Angeles · Modesto · Newport · Oakland · Redlands · Sacramento · San Diego · San Jose · Yorba Linda
Colorado4Colorado Springs · Denver · Fort Collins · Grand Junction
Connecticut1Hartford
Florida5Fort Lauderdale · Jacksonville · Orlando · Tallahassee · Tampa
Georgia1Atlanta
Hawaii4Honolulu · Kahului · Kona · Laie
Idaho11Boise · Burley · Caldwell · Coeur d’Alene · Idaho Falls · Meridian · Montpelier · Pocatello · Rexburg · Teton River · Twin Falls
Illinois2Chicago · Nauvoo
Indiana1Indianapolis
Iowa1Des Moines
Kansas1Wichita
Kentucky1Louisville
Louisiana1Baton Rouge
Maine1Portland
Maryland1Washington D.C.
Massachusetts1Boston
Michigan2Detroit · Grand Rapids
Minnesota1St. Paul
Missouri3Kansas City · Springfield · St. Louis
Montana3Billings · Helena · Missoula
Nebraska1Winter Quarters
Nevada4Elko · Las Vegas · Lone Mountain · Reno
New Jersey1Summit
New Mexico2Albuquerque · Farmington
New York2Manhattan · Palmyra
North Carolina2Charlotte · Raleigh
North Dakota1Bismarck
Ohio3Cincinnati · Cleveland · Columbus
Oklahoma2Oklahoma City · Tulsa
Oregon3Medford · Portland · Willamette Valley
Pennsylvania3Harrisburg · Philadelphia · Pittsburgh
South Carolina1Columbia · Greenville
South Dakota1Rapid City
Tennessee3Knoxville · Memphis · Nashville
Texas10Austin · Dallas · El Paso · Fort Worth · Houston South · Houston · Lubbock · McAllen · McKinney · San Antonio
Utah32Bountiful · Brigham City · Cedar City · Deseret Peak · Draper · Ephraim · Heber Valley · Jordan River · Layton · Lehi · Lindon · Logan · Manti · Monticello · Mount Timpanogos · Ogden · Oquirrh Mountain · Orem · Payson · Price · Provo Rock Canyon · Provo City Center · Red Cliffs · Salt Lake · Saratoga Springs · St. George · · Smithfield · Spanish Fork · Syracuse · Taylorsville · Vernal · West Jordan
Virginia4Norfolk · Richmond · Roanoke · Winchester
Washington6Columbia River · Moses Lake · Seattle · Spokane · Tacoma · Vancouver
Wisconsin1Milwaukee
Wyoming3Casper · Cody · Star Valley
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, 2 Swenson, Jason, “Peace, beauty find home in new temple,” Church News, 23 November 2001
3 Hinckley, Gordon B.,“A Time of New Beginnings”, LDS.org, 2 April 2000. Accessed 11 November 2014.
4 Harriet Sutherland (November 4, 2000), “Columbia River Washington Temple construction begins”, Church News, https://www.thechurchnews.com/2000/11/4/23245398/columbia-river-washington-temple-construction-begins/.
5, 6, 7 Sutherland, Harriet “Temple inspires public,”Church News, 1 November 2001.
8 ”Dedicatory prayer: ‘The offering of our hearts and our hands,'” Church News, 24 Nov. 2001, 25 Jun. 2005
9, 10 Columbia River Washington Temple,” The Church News

Last updated on: 18 December 2025