Draper Utah Temple Wiki

Quick Facts

ANNOUNCED
2 October 2004

ANNOUNCED BY
President Gordon B. Hinckley

GROUNDBREAKING
5 August 2006

GROUNDBREAKING PRESIDED BY
President Gordon B. Hinckley

DEDICATED
20 March 2009

DEDICATED BY
Predsident Thomas S. Monson


DEDICATION ORDER
129

LOCATION
14065 Canyon Vista Ln
Draper, Utah 84020-5626
United States

PHONE
(+1) 801-576-4240

Description

The Draper Utah Temple is the 129th temple of The Church. Standing high on a ridgeline near the mouth of Draper’s Corner Canyon—featuring 1,021 acres of dedicated open space—the Draper Utah Temple offers a inspiring view of the entire Salt Lake Valley. The beautiful granite edifice shares a site with a meetinghouse and a joint parking lot, constructed at the same time as the temple. Visitors are welcome to roam the beautifully landscaped grounds and take in the spirit of this holy House of the Lord.

History

Announcement

The intent to construct the temple was announced by church president Gordon B. Hinckley during the opening session of the October 2004 general conference.  President Hinckley said the new building was needed to relieve overcrowding in other temples in the valley. The temple is the fourth temple in the Salt Lake Valley in addition to the Salt Lake, Jordan River, and Oquirrh Mountain temples. No location was specified at the time of the announcement, spawning lively discussion and speculation along the Wasatch Front.[1]The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, “Two New Temples Announced at General Conference,” 2 Oct. 2004.

Speculation was put to rest several weeks later on Sunday, November 21, 2004, when a letter from the First Presidency was read to Church congregations in the southern Salt Lake Valley announcing Draper as the location of the temple. Rumors of a temple for Draper had already been circulating for quite some time, since—two years earlier—Church representatives told Corner Canyon’s developer that the reason for their purchase of additional acreage next to its stake center site was for construction of a temple.[2]Laura Hancock, “Draper site is chosen for new LDS temple,” Deseret News 22 Nov. 2004, 22 Nov. 2004 .

Utah Temples at Time of Announcement

Announced

Under Construction

Dedicated

ANNOUNCED ORDER
129

Date2004 10 02
ByGordon B. Hinckley
RolePresident
ViaGeneral Conference

⮜Preceded by Rexburg Idaho
Followed by Twin Falls Idaho

Announced 2004 10 02

Planning and Approval

On February 8, 2005, the Draper City Council unanimously approved a change to zoning ordinances, which removed the only obstacle to construction of the temple. The ordinance permits for “houses of worship” to reach 90 feet high in the residential area of the temple site. This limit, which applies to occupied areas of a building, does not restrict the height of steeples or spires.[3] Jacob Santini, “Draper OKs a change in height limit for LDS Temple,” Salt Lake Tribune 9 Feb. 2005, 10 Feb. 2005 .

On May 18, 2006, Draper’s planning commission approved plans for the temple, which was presented as a 57,000-square-foot facility reaching 166 feet high and capped by a gold-leafed statue of the angel Moroni on a single central spire. The design is similar to the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple, with white walls (Temple White Granite from China), a central spire and a stair step design. A large variety of trees were shown for the grounds in addition to a 492-space parking lot.[4] Amelia Nielson-Stowell, “Draper officials approve plans for LDS temple,” Deseret News 20 May 2006, 20 May 2006 .

Groundbreaking

Church President, Gordon B. Hinckley, broke ground and dedicated the site for the temple on August 5, 2006. “It is a great tribute to our people,” he said. “They are so faithful in temple attendance and it is for this reason that we construct this beautiful house of the Lord.”[5]Jennifer Dobner, “Church leaders break ground for LDS temple in Draper,” Deseret News 5 Aug. 2006, 6 Aug. 2006 .

In 2004 the Church recorded more than 32 million temple ceremonies performed by Church members, and temple attendance has been increasing, especially since many members now have access to temples that are much closer. This is due to President Hinckley’s zeal to build temples throughout the world. In the years that President Gordon B. Hinckley presided over the Church, more than 70 temples were been built. At the groundbreaking ceremony President Hinckley stated, “We must build temples where people can get to them, the Church is now worldwide which means that temples must be built all over the world. Fortunately, because of the faithful, tithe-paying Saints, we have the means to do so.”

The groundbreaking for the temple occurred during an invitation only ceremony at the site which was broadcast on the church’s satellite system to nearby stake centers. The ceremony was conducted by Russell M. Nelson of the church’s Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, with all members of the First Presidency in attendance.[6]Nielson-Stowell, Amelia (August 4, 2006). “Groundbreaking Saturday”. Deseret Morning News. Retrieved October 16, 2012.[7]Ortiz, Marcos (August 6, 2006). “LDS leaders break ground on new temple”. ABC 4 News (KTVX). Retrieved August 8, 2006.

GROUNDBREAKING ORDER
129

Date2006 08 05
ByGordon B. Hinkley
RolePresident
Attendees#

⮜Preceded by Twin Falls Idaho
Followed by Oquirrh Mountain Utah

Construction

During construction, an average of 150 craftsmen worked on the temple each day.

The Relief Society sisters in a student ward in the Draper area hosted a special luncheon to thank the laborers for their hard work. Jennifer Francis, a participating Relief Society member, told a Church reporter that the sisters’ service was “a symbolic gesture mirroring the acts of the female Relief Society of Nauvoo. As their initial work was tied to the temple, our posture likewise would be oriented towards the temple.”[8]Jennifer Francis, quoted in “‘Thank You’ Meal for Draper Temple Builders,” Church News, Dec. 15, 2007,

Open House

An Open House for the Temple was announced on November 29, 2008. Members of the public were invited to tour the temple during an open house from 15 January-14 March 2009.[9]“Church notes plans for Draper open house”, Church News, November 29, 2008, retrieved October 16, 2012

684,721 visitors toured the Draper Utah Temple during the 51 day open house, an average of 13,426 per day.

Start Date2009 01 15
End Date2009 03 14
Days51
Attendees684,721
Per day13,426

Dedication

From March 20 to 22, 2009, the temple was dedicated in 12 sessions. Church President Thomas S. Monson gave the dedicatory prayer. He asked for a special blessing on the youth of the Church, imploring that they “may … carry on in the traditions of their parents and grandparents.” President Monson also spoke of spiritual rededication in Church members’ lives and the peace that comes from following Jesus Christ: “As we dedicate this sacred edifice, we rededicate our very lives to Thee and to Thy work. O, Holy Father, bless us with the peace promised by Thy Son — even the peace which passeth understanding.”[10]Draper Utah Temple dedicatory prayer, in Church News, Mar. 28, 2009,

The twelfth dedicatory session, presided over by President Monson, was broadcast via closed circuit television to stake centers all over Utah.[11]Weaver, Sarah Jane; Lloyd, R. Scott (March 20, 2009), “Draper Utah Temple: ‘Memorable occasion'”, Church News, retrieved October 16, 2012

DEDICATION ORDER
129

Date2009 03 20
ByThomas S. Monson
RolePresident
Sessions12
Attendees#

⮜Preceeded by Twin Falls Idaho
Followed by Oquirrh Mountain Utah

Dedicatory Prayer

Construction Duration

SpanDuration
Announced
to
Groundbreaking
1 y,
10 m,
3 d
Groundbreaking
to
Dedication
2 y,
7 m,
15 d
Announced
to
Dedication
4 y,
5 m,
19 d

Dedicatory Order

GLOBAL

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REGION
region
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COUNTRY
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STATE
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CITY
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Summary

The Draper Utah Temple was the 129th Temple in the world, the 64th in the United States, the 12th temple built in Utah, and the 3rd built in the Salt Lake Valley, following the Salt Lake Temple and the Jordan River Utah Temple. The Oquirrh Mountain Utah Temple was also under construction and nearing completion at the time of the Draper Utah Temple dedication.

At the Time of its dedication there were 7 other temples under construction and an additional 10 awaiting groundbreaking. There was 1 temple under renovation.

Detail

Announced

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Under Construction

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Under Renovation

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Dedication

Dedication Order

Under ConstructionAwaiting GroundbreakingUnder Renovation
Oquirrh Mountain UtahTegucigalpa HondurasLaie Hawaii
Cebu City PhilippinesQuetzaltenengo Guatemala
Vncouver British ColumbiaGilbert Arizona
Manaus BrazilPhoenix Arizona
San Salvador El SalvadorCalgary Alberta
The Gila Valley ArizonaCordoba Argentina
Kyiv UkraineKansas City Missouri
Philadelphia Pennsylvania
Rome Italy
Trujillo Peru

Presidents

Temple PresidentYears Served
President K. Brent Somers2015–
President Harold C. Brown2012–2015
President Russell E. Tueller2010–2012
President Donald L. Staheli2009–2010

Details

Location

At the southern end of the Salt Lake Valley, the Draper Utah Temple overlooks a gorgeous panorama from just below a ridge of the Wasatch Mountains. This majestic white edifice is the 129th temple belonging to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and it is the 12th Mormon temple to be built in the state of Utah. Latter-day Saints living in the southeastern part of the Salt Lake Valley attend the temple to find peace and worship God.

The Draper Utah Temple sits on 12 acres (49,000 m2) at 2000 East and 14000 South in Draper, Utah. The 57,000-square-foot (5,300 m2) temple is 166 feet (51 m) high from the main level to the top of the structure’s spire, which includes the Angel Moroni statue that sits atop most LDS temples. The location near the mouth of Draper’s Corner Canyon includes an LDS meetinghouse. The temple towers over 1,000 acres (400 ha; 1.6 sq mi) of pristine open space in the canyon below that the city approved in fall of 2005. Many varieties of trees surround the temple and line the 492 parking spots.[12] Nielson-Stowell, Amelia (May 20, 2006), “Draper officials approve plans for LDS temple”, Deseret Morning News

Location

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Elevation

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Site

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Exterior

The vertical lines of the tiered structure draw the eye heavenward.  From the ground to the top of the statue of the angel Moroni, the temple stands 166 feet tall. The 12-acre temple grounds are replete with trees and flowers. White stone walkways surround the building, encouraging visitors to enjoy the landscaping and admire the temple’s beauty. A meetinghouse and an adjacent parking lot are also present on the temple grounds.

Cladding

The white Chinese granite that covers the exterior vividly stands out against the nearby mountainous backdrop and the expansive Utah sky.

Windows

Long rectangular windows with geometric patterns decorate the building’s sides and central spire. The temple’s celestial room contains impressive sets of these windows, which flood the room with natural light.

The art glass in the temple was designed by Utah artist Tom Holdman of Highland. Holdman has now provided stained-glass art for 14 LDS temples, as well as the LDS Conference Center in downtown Salt Lake City. The stained-glass art for this temple is reminiscent of log cabins and quilt designs, with an arts and crafts influence. The Draper temple has 700 made of art-glass. The glasswork took over 2 1/2 years to put together.

All of the art-glass windows created by Utah artist Tom Holdman for the Draper Utah Temple miraculously survived a fire that left only a portion of one window damaged, even though the art studio itself was so badly burned, it was condemned. There are 221 exterior windows, 50 interior windows, and 432 door panels for a total of 35,420 hand-cut pieces of glass. The windows incorporate the Log Cabin quilt pattern used by the early pioneers.

Holdman Studios, owned by Utah-based glass artist Tom Holdman, created art glass for the windows. Holdman Studios has contributed thousands of windows for at least 16 Mormon temples, including the São Paulo Brazil Temple, the Manhattan New York Temple and the Rome Italy Temple.

Exterior Finish

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Architectural Features

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Specifications

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To Shoulder##
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Footprint##

Symbolism

Inscription

There are two inscriptions on the Draper Utah Temple. Both are on the east side of the temple. The first is on the awning above the entrance of the east door. The inscription is engraved in the stone, and painted black.

HOLINESS TO THE LORD
THE HOUSE OF THE LORD

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

The second is on the transom above the east doors. The transom is brass, and the letters of the inscription are raised.

HOLINESS
TO THE LORD

THE HOUSE
OF THE LORD

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

The cornerstone of the Draper Utah Temple is on the south east corner of the temple, facing east. The text of teh inscription is engraved in the stone and un-adorned.

ERECTED
2009

Location
Faces
Material
Set
Edge
Type
Finish
Language

Spires and Finial

Spires

The spire on the Draper temple is a single stepped spire in the middle of the temple. The lower portion of the main spire is barrel shape, with 4 edges being cut in a concave shape. The upper portion of the spire is a thinner posle that has been gilded to match the Angel Moroni State on top of it.

Spire Details

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

On July 8, 2008, a gold-leafed pedestal and statue of the angel Moroni were hoisted atop the spire of the temple. The Moroni raising marked an important milestone in construction and coincided with completion of the exterior granite facing. The statue was carved in 1985 by Karl Quilter and faces east.

Sculptor:Karl Quilter
Commissioned:1978
Completed:1985
Material:Fiberglass
Height:10 ft (3.2 m)
Weight:~400 lbs (136.1 kg)
Currently On:51 temples
Finish:
Placed:
Faces:

Interior

Behind the recommend desk is an etched-glass panel, also created by Holdman Studios, that contains images of the sego lily. The sego lily, Utah’s state flower, serves as a reminder of pioneer efforts to settle the valley, and this motif also appears in the temple’s woodwork and carpets.

Motif

The Draper temple employs the sego lily (Utah’s edible state flower) as a common motif in the decor.
The theme carried through the Draper Utah Temple is of the sego lily—Utah’s state flower.

Woodwork

Makore wood from central Africa was used in the doors, trim, paneling, and cabinets.

Stone work

The limestone used in the flooring and base was imported from Lyons, France.

Other stone work in the temple features granite from China,

Area32,240 f2
(2,995.19 m2)
Floors above grade
Floors below Grade
Baptistries
Initiatories
Endowment Rooms
Sealing Rooms
Baptistry

The baptistry of the Draper Utah Temple is located on the downhill western side of the building, which allows for natural light to pass into the room through floor-to-ceiling window.

In the baptistry foyer, an oil painting from 1922 illustrates the angel Moroni giving the gold plates to Joseph Smith. The painting once hung in the Draper Tabernacle, which does not exist anymore

Baptistries:
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Interior:
Shape:
Bowl Shape:
Pillar:
Stairs:
Font Well:
Initiatory Spaces

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

The Draper Utah Temple has 4 endowment rooms, arranged in 2 pairs of 3 for a 2 stage progressive endowment. Gorgeous artist renditions of Utah mountain scenes decorate the instruction rooms, a depiction of Draper’s Corner Canyon, and its view of the Salt Lake Valley. Ordinance room murals were designed by Utah artist Linda Curley and Colorado artist Keith Bond.

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

The Celestial Room sits at the center of the top floor directly under the spire. A glittering chandelier hangs from the ceiling, and patrons enjoy moments of quiet contemplation and scripture study here.

Sealing Room

The Draper Utah Temple has 5 sealing rooms.

Sealing Rooms
Largest Capacity

Individuals and Contractors

Architect

FFKR Architects was the Architect of record for this temple.

Project Manager

Evan Nelson was the Project Manager

General Contractor

Okland Construction was the general contradctor.

Okland Construction Projects

TempleProjectYears*
Ogden UtahConstruction1967-1972
Washington D.C.Construction1968-1974
Logan UtahRenovation1970-1979
Mesa ArizonaRenovation1974-1975
San Diego CaliforniaConstruction1984-1993
Manti UtahRenovation1985
Salt LakeConstruction1985
Bountiful UtahConstruction1991-1995
Mount Timpanogos UtahConstruction1992-1996
Monterrey MexicoConstruction Manager1995-2002
Albuquerque New MexicoConstruction1997-2002
Hermosillo Sonora MexicoConstruction1998-2000
Mérida MexicoProject Manager1998-2000
Tampico MexicoConstruction Manager1998-2000
Villahermosa MexicoConstruction Manager1998-2000
Oaxaca MexicoConstruction Manager1999-2000
Palmyra New YorkConstruction1999-2000
Tuxtla Gutiérrez MexicoConstruction Manager1999-2000
Veracruz MexicoConstruction Manager1999-2000
Guadalajara MexicoProject Manager1999-2001
Nauvoo IllinoisConstruction1999-2002
Snowflake ArizonaConstruction2000-2002
Sacramento CaliforniaConstruction2001-2006
Draper UtahConstruction2004-2009
Oquirrh Mountain UtahConstruction2005-2009
Los Angeles CaliforniaRenovation2006
Washington D.C.Renovation2006
Gilbert ArizonaConstruction2008-2014
Durban South AfricaConstruction2011-2020
Fort Collins ColoradoConstruction2013-2017
Idaho Falls IdahoConstruction2014-2016
Pocatello IdahoConstruction2019-
Feather River CaliforniaConstruction2020-2023
Deseret Peak UtahConstruction2020-2024
Taylorsville UtahConstruction2020-2024
Burley IdahoConstruction2022

Other Contractor

MGB+A was the landscpae Architect for the temple.

Projects by MGB+A

TempleYears
Provo Utah2006
Salt Lake2010
Burley Idaho2021
Draper Utah2004-2009
Oquirrh Mountain Utah2005-2009
Idaho Falls Idaho2010-2011
Tijuana Mexico2010-2015
Lisbon Portugal2010-2019
Port-au-Prince Haiti2017-2019
Praia Cape Verde2018-2021
Saratoga Springs2019-2023
Okinawa Japan2019-2023
Red Cliffs Utah2020-2024

Region

Box Elder1Brigham City
Cache2Logan · Smithfield
Carbon1Price
Davis3Bountiful · Layton · Syracuse
Iron1Cedar City
Salt Lake6Draper · Jordan River · Oquirrh Mountain · Salt Lake · Taylorsville · West Jordan
San Juan1Monticello 
Sanpete2Ephraim · Manti
Tooele1Deseret Peak
Uintah1Vernal
Utah9Lehi · Lindon · Mount Timpanogos · Orem · Payson · Provo Rock Canyon · Provo City Center · Saratoga Springs · Spanish Fork
Wasatch1Heber Valley
Washington2Red Cliffs · St. George
Weber1Ogden
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 Links

References

References
1 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, “Two New Temples Announced at General Conference,” 2 Oct. 2004.
2 Laura Hancock, “Draper site is chosen for new LDS temple,” Deseret News 22 Nov. 2004, 22 Nov. 2004 .
3 Jacob Santini, “Draper OKs a change in height limit for LDS Temple,” Salt Lake Tribune 9 Feb. 2005, 10 Feb. 2005 .
4 Amelia Nielson-Stowell, “Draper officials approve plans for LDS temple,” Deseret News 20 May 2006, 20 May 2006 .
5 Jennifer Dobner, “Church leaders break ground for LDS temple in Draper,” Deseret News 5 Aug. 2006, 6 Aug. 2006 .
6 Nielson-Stowell, Amelia (August 4, 2006). “Groundbreaking Saturday”. Deseret Morning News. Retrieved October 16, 2012.
7 Ortiz, Marcos (August 6, 2006). “LDS leaders break ground on new temple”. ABC 4 News (KTVX). Retrieved August 8, 2006.
8 Jennifer Francis, quoted in “‘Thank You’ Meal for Draper Temple Builders,” Church News, Dec. 15, 2007,
9 “Church notes plans for Draper open house”, Church News, November 29, 2008, retrieved October 16, 2012
10 Draper Utah Temple dedicatory prayer, in Church News, Mar. 28, 2009,
11 Weaver, Sarah Jane; Lloyd, R. Scott (March 20, 2009), “Draper Utah Temple: ‘Memorable occasion'”, Church News, retrieved October 16, 2012
12 Nielson-Stowell, Amelia (May 20, 2006), “Draper officials approve plans for LDS temple”, Deseret Morning News

Last updated on: 7 December 2025