Pocatello Idaho Temple Wiki

Description

There are approximately 450,000 members of the Church in Idaho—nearly a third of the state’s population of 1.7 million people—organized into 129 stakes. There are 11 stakes in the Pocatello-Chubbuck metro area with another 11 stakes located in the surrounding communities of American Falls, Arimo, Blackfoot, Grace, Malad, McCammon, and Soda Springs.
Temple Site Conjecture

History

In the 1930s, when Church leaders determined that the next Latter-day Saint temple would be constructed in Idaho, leaders from various stakes throughout the state urged that their respective communities be considered for the honor. Ezra Taft Benson, who was a counselor in the Boise Stake presidency, presented a particularly stirring argument for the state capital to be considered.[1]Richard O. Cowan, Temples to Dot the Earth (Springville, Utah: Cedar Fort, Incorporated, 1997) 141–142. In time, however, a hillside site was seriously investigated in the booming railroad town of Pocatello. The community’s surrounding mountains made a beautiful setting for a temple in a city with excellent interstate transportation and a growing population—the second highest in the state. However, a depression-era economy had left the local government so poor, it would not pay to extend water and utilities to the west-bench location.[2]. Paul Menser, “Idaho Falls, Pocatello – Tale of the tape: Longtime rivals learning to cooperate,” Post Register 21 Jul. 2002. In the meantime, the Chamber of Commerce in Idaho Falls, located 50 miles north of Pocatello, donated a prime parcel of land on the banks of the Snake River, bordering an LDS hospital. And that became the site of Idaho’s first temple.

As the years passed, Pocatello experienced a series of economic setbacks, producing a local joke among members that the city was “cursed” for passing on the temple. Nevertheless, the hope never died for a House of the Lord to be constructed there. Decades after Idaho’s first temple was constructed, a second temple was announced in 1982 for the state capital and largest city, the Boise Idaho Temple. In 1997, land on Pocatello’s east bench was secured by the Church for the anticipated purpose of building a temple. However, it was the Rexburg Idaho Temple that was announced as Idaho’s third in 2003, two years after the announcement that Ricks College would become Brigham Young University–Idaho. And months later, the Twin Falls Idaho Temple was announced to serve members in the more isolated South Central region of the state. Pocatello Saints patiently waited through the perennial speculations and rumors, which were even picked up by the local newspaper. In 2011, the Meridian Idaho Temple was announced as the fifth for the state to serve the rapidly growing Boise metro area. Other communities near Pocatello also received temples including the Brigham City Utah Temple and the Star Valley Wyoming Temple. The Saints of Pocatello rejoiced in each new temple, grateful that faithful Saints would be spared difficult travel.

In 2017, Pocatello’s long-awaited dream took one step closer to reality. The city had been placed on a long list of potential temple locations produced by the Temple Department that was presented to the prophet, President Thomas S. Monson. When Pocatello was mentioned, he stopped the presenters and said: “Pocatello will get a temple. The Saints there are well prepared, and it’s time for them to have a temple.”[3]Chris Oswalt, “LDS church announced plans for Pocatello temple,” Local News 8 2 Apr. 2017, 8 May 2017 On April 2, 2017, President Monson himself made the announcement during the Sunday Morning Session of General Conference. Shouts of joy rang in living rooms throughout the valley, and tears of gratitude were shed. Pocatello would receive its temple.

Announcement

Idaho’s sixth temple, the Pocatello Idaho Temple, was announced by President Thomas S. Monson on April 2, 2017, in his opening remarks at the Sunday Morning Session of General Conference. There are five operating temples in the state including the Boise Idaho Temple, the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple, the Rexburg Idaho Temple, Twin Falls Idaho Temple, and Meridian Idaho Temple. An extensive renovation project on the Idaho Falls temple, which reduced the temple’s seating capacity, was rededicated on June 4, 2017. Idaho’s newest temple in Meridian, located in the Boise metro area, was dedicated on November 19, 2017.[4]”President Monson Announces Five New Temples,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 2 Apr. 2017.

Construction Approval

On April 6, 2017, four days after the announcement of the temple, the property for the temple was annexed into the City of Pocatello as part of a larger land annexation.

On June 22, 2017, state approval was granted for construction of a new I-15 interchange to be built north of the city, which will provide better access to the temple. Construction of the Northgate interchange began November 5, 2018 and opened on December 6, 2019.[5]Matt Davenport, “Northgate Planned Community Announced for Bannock County,” KPVI 6 Sept. 2017, 14 Sept. 2017 .

On November 15, 2017, application for the subdivision where the temple will rise, known as Crestview Estates Division 2, was considered at a Planning and Zoning Commission meeting. Applicants included the Church, the developer, and the engineering firm. The nearly 29-acre subdivision was presented including the 11-acre temple site and 31 surrounding residential lots. A proposal to rename Ray Street to Monson Street was also included in the application. The change would mean that the streets bordering the temple site would be named Monson Street, Legacy Drive, Clearwater Street, and Andrew Street. The Commission unanimously recommended approval of the subdivision to the City Council.

On February 1, 2018, the City Council approved both the subdivision and the street name change. Construction of the subdivision infrastructure began the following month and concluded in the fall of 2018.

Temple Site

The site location for the Pocatello Idaho Temple was officially announced in a news release from Church headquarters on September 7, 2018. The temple will stand in northeast Pocatello on an 11-acre parcel adjoining the stake center for the Pocatello Idaho Highland Stake. The east bench property offers a beautiful hillside location visible to travelers coming from I-15 or I-86.

Temple Rendering

On September 7, 2018, the official rendering of the Pocatello Idaho Temple was released to the public, revealing a white three-story building with a multi-tiered central spire.

The design of the Pocatello Idaho Temple complements the familiar architecture of the historic Idaho Falls Idaho Temple where Pocatello-area members have attended temple services for decades. It also appears to incorporate a floor plan similar to the recently dedicated Meridian Idaho Temple, which Elder Larry Y. Wilson, Executive Director of the Temple Department, alluded to in an interview with East Idaho News. He said that the Pocatello Idaho Temple was expected to be a larger temple, offering the Meridian Idaho Temple as a recent example of larger temple design.[6]Nate Eaton, “EAST IDAHO NEWSMAKERS: Mormon Temple Dept. Executive Director Elder Larry Wilson,” East Idaho News 30 Apr. 2017, 16 Jun. 2017.

Construction Approval

On October 11, 2018, a Church representative presented two variance requests at a Hearing Examiner meeting to allow construction of the temple. The first request was a variance from the height restrictions, and the second variance was a variance from the lighting standards. The Hearing Examiner approved both the height variance and the lighting variance with the condition that the nighttime floodlighting be turned off by 10 p.m. each night.

On January 30, 2019, plans were submitted for review to the City of Pocatello Building Department, and application was made for a building permit. Final approval was granted on February 12, 2019.

Neighbor Open House

On March 1, 2019, renderings of the Pocatello Idaho Temple and site plan were on display at a neighbor open house held at the stake center west of the temple site. The previous evening, representatives from Church headquarters held a briefing with local Church leaders and conducted interviews with the media.

On Tuesday, March 5, 2019, over 2,500 eager Pocatello-area youth descended on the temple site with shovels in hand to clear the ground of vegetation in preparation for the groundbreaking ceremony. With so many helpers, all of the weeds and sagebrush were pulled from the 12-acre site in less than 30 minutes.

Groundbreaking

In an answer to many prayers, sunshine and beautiful blue skies accompanied the Pocatello Idaho Temple groundbreaking ceremony on Saturday, March 16, 2019, despite weeks of gray clouds and heavy snowfall. The opening prayer was offered by hometown hero, Taysom Hill, who is a quarterback for the New Orleans Saints but put on his jersey for the Latter-day Saints on this occasion. Elder Wilford W. Andersen of the Seventy presided at the ceremony and offered the dedicatory prayer. Church and community leaders, local developers, and numerous interfaith leaders were the first to turn the ceremonial shovelfuls of dirt.

Bill Williams, Director of Temple Design, who was born and raised in Pocatello, commented, “This temple combines classical architectural elements as well as more modern art deco designs and draws upon colors native to the beautiful state of Idaho.” He continued, “The details inside and outside the building will be stunning, from the art glass to the flooring to the grounds. Those who visit this temple will also be able to enjoy lovely views looking out to the west toward the Snake River Plain.”[7]Ingram, Aleah. “Dedication Date Announced for Pocatello Idaho Temple.” LDS Daily, 17 June 2021, https://www.ldsdaily.com/church-lds/dedication-date-announced-for-pocatello-idaho-temple/.

Open House

The public was invited to tour the new temple from Saturday, 18 September 2021 through Saturday, 23 October 2021, except for Sundays, including September 19, 26, October 2–3 (General Conference|general conference), 10 and 17.

During the five-week public open house of the Pocatello Idaho Temple, the number of guests who toured the interior of the building totaled 250,721.

Youth Devotional

A youth devotional will be held on Saturday, November 6, 2021, just prior to the dedication. The dedicatory sessions and youth devotional will be broadcast to all congregations in the Pocatello Idaho Temple District.

Dedication

On Sunday, 7 November 2021, President M. Russell Ballard, acting president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, presided at the dedication of the Pocatello Idaho Temple. The dedicatory sessions were held at 9 a.m., noon, and 3 p.m. MDT and were broadcast to all congregations in the Pocatello Idaho temple district.

Dedicatory Prayer

Dedication Order

The Pocatello Idaho Temple will be the sixth temple built in Idaho, following the Idaho Falls Idaho Temple (1945), the Boise Idaho Temple (1984), the Rexburg Idaho Temple (2008), the Twin Falls Idaho Temple (2008), and the Meridian Idaho Temple (2017).

Temple Opening

The Pocatello Idaho Temple will open to patrons for ordinances on Tuesday, November 16, 2021.

Presidents

Temple PresidentTemple MatronYears Served
Bruce H WinegarKaren Finch Winegar2021–

The Pocatello Idaho Temple is expected to be a larger temple, according to an interview with Elder Larry Y. Wilson, Executive Director of the Temple Department. He pointed to the Meridian Idaho Temple as a recent example of a larger temple design.[8]Nate Eaton, “EAST IDAHO NEWSMAKERS: Mormon Temple Dept. Executive Director Elder Larry Wilson,” East Idaho News 30 Apr. 2017, 16 Jun. 2017.

Location

The 195-foot tall Pocatello Idaho Temple sits high on the city’s east bench just east of the stake center for the Pocatello Idaho Highland Stake. The beautiful granite walls are easily visible to motorists traveling Interstate 15 or Interstate 86, especially at night when lighting illuminates the exterior structure and the stained-glass windows. The temple grounds have nearly 500 trees and tens of thousands of plants and flowers. A plaza is located on the north side where bridal parties may gather.

Exterior

Cladding

The exterior cladding is a light gray granite called temple white and is supplied by Best View in Fuzhou, China, and installed by IMS Masonry of Lindon, Utah. It is sandblasted to achieve the lighter finish. The height of the temple measured at the parapet above the third floor is 68’10”. The height to the top of the tower is 182’. The height to the top of the angel Moroni is 194’6”.

Windows

FFKR Architects designed the art glass with technical assistance from Glass Images in Orem, Utah. The art glass features wildflowers of the Idaho mountain desert including the syringa, which is the Idaho state flower, and the bitterroot. The colors in the art glass are sage, representing the sagebrush of the region; gold, representing the wild grasses that turn gold in the summer; and pink and coral, representing the sunset, the bitterroot flower and Red Hill above Pocatello. The fabricator is Holdman Studios located in Lehi, Utah.

Landscaping

The landscaping has been arranged in a series of formal planting areas featuring a linear arrangement to complement the temple. The plantings have a vertical hierarchy that ascends toward the temple. Plantings were selected for their seasonal interest, beautiful flowering patterns, ability to attract pollinators such as butterflies and suitability for the local climate. The most common trees on the site are the Norwegian sunset maple, sawleaf zelkova and Dolgo crabapple. The shrubs used on site were selected for their bright flowering colors, such as English lavender, snowberry and snow queen hydrangea. Around the perimeter of the site will be a combination of white firs, alpine firs and lodgepole pines, which were selected from the trees growing in the mountains around the area. FFKR Architects of Salt Lake City, Utah, is the landscape architect.

Symbolism

Inscriptions

Cornerstone

Spires and Moroni

Spire

Moroni

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Interior

The carpet and rugs have a design that is congruent with the other motifs and design elements in the temple. There are circles, octagons and raking (striped) elements supplemented by florals that are indigenous to Pocatello. These are the Indian paintbrush, bitterroot and syringa. Colors selected of greens, golds and corals are representative of the natural colors of Pocatello landscape and botanicals.

The main stone, luna beige, is quarried out of Bethlehem, Israel. The countertops and font in the general building use Sahara gold, quarried out of Pakistan. Two accent stones are used as details in the floors and restroom counters: a green stone called costa esmerelda (a granite from Iran) and a red stone called rojo alicante (a marble from Spain). The bride’s room uses two accent stones, sakura (a marble out of Turkey) and arandis (a granite out of Namibia). The celestial and sealing room marble is called crema ella and is quarried in Turkey.

The decorative painting uses all the same colors of green, yellow and coral, with gold added. The leaves and pedals of syringa, bitterroot and Indian paintbrush are supplemented by geometric lines and cut back/rounded corners. All the decorative painting is applied to ceilings and woodwork to accent and highlight woodwork designs and was painted by David Horne of Sandy, Utah.

The chapel has a historic art glass tri-part depiction of the Savior with sheep. It was salvaged from a church in the eastern United States and has been restored. It was created by Frank Drehobl and Sons Art Glass in Chicago, Illinois, and restored by Holdman Studios in Lehi, Utah.

Standard fixtures are made of antique brass and glass, with crystal added in the ordinance rooms. A syringa flower is featured in the rounded corners. The celestial and sealing room fixtures were designed similarly but entirely in brass and crystal fabricated by HB Architectural Lighting in Bronx, New York, and installed by Wheeler Electric of Idaho Falls, Idaho.

The general wood species is quartered cut sapele with some accent panels in figure cut crotch mahogany, stained to match the sapele. These panels are in the front of the recommend desk as well as the pulpit in the chapel and the instruction room altars. The millwork was fabricated and installed by Boswell Wasatch Architectural Woodwork of Springville, Utah.

The baptismal font railings are a standard stock aluminum construction with custom decorative panels with an antique brass inspired finish. There are accent panels that present the leaves of the syringa and petals of the bitterroot flowers, local elements to Pocatello. In railings outside the font area the top cap and hand railing are made of sapele and fabricated by Smith Design of Gunter, Texas.

The door panels are a standard-style rail with a recessed wood panel or art glass. The doors are of sapele of the Congo River region and are fabricated by Marshfield Door Systems of Marshfield, Wisconsin, and installed by Beacon Commercial Door & Lock, located in Salt Lake City, Utah. The finish is antique brass in the general temple and brass in the sealing and celestial rooms.

All ceilings are either standard drywall construction, catalogue acoustic ceiling panels or a combination of both. All administration suites, dressing rooms and other secondary spaces have acoustic panels. All drywall ceilings have a crown molding added that is a painted maple, poplar or similar wood. The ceilings are installed by Ed’s Painting Contractor, Inc., of Blackfoot, Idaho.

The temple’s original artwork includes “Aspen Grove” by Michael Coleman; “Peaceful Morning” and “And the Evening, and the Morning Were the Fifth Day” (Genesis 1:23) by Leon Parson; “For the Strength of the Hills” and “Haystack Mountain” by Ken Spencer; “Mink Creek” and “Scout Mountain Vista” by Ken Stockton and “Not Alone” by Minerva Teichert.[9]”Open House Begins for Pocatello Idaho Temple,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 13 Sept. 2021.

Individuals and Contractors

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Sources and Links

References

References
1 Richard O. Cowan, Temples to Dot the Earth (Springville, Utah: Cedar Fort, Incorporated, 1997) 141–142.
2 . Paul Menser, “Idaho Falls, Pocatello – Tale of the tape: Longtime rivals learning to cooperate,” Post Register 21 Jul. 2002.
3 Chris Oswalt, “LDS church announced plans for Pocatello temple,” Local News 8 2 Apr. 2017, 8 May 2017
4 ”President Monson Announces Five New Temples,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 2 Apr. 2017.
5 Matt Davenport, “Northgate Planned Community Announced for Bannock County,” KPVI 6 Sept. 2017, 14 Sept. 2017 .
6, 8 Nate Eaton, “EAST IDAHO NEWSMAKERS: Mormon Temple Dept. Executive Director Elder Larry Wilson,” East Idaho News 30 Apr. 2017, 16 Jun. 2017.
7 Ingram, Aleah. “Dedication Date Announced for Pocatello Idaho Temple.” LDS Daily, 17 June 2021, https://www.ldsdaily.com/church-lds/dedication-date-announced-for-pocatello-idaho-temple/.
9 ”Open House Begins for Pocatello Idaho Temple,” The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints News Release, 13 Sept. 2021.