Richmond Virginia Temple Wiki
Quick Facts
ANNOUNCED
1 April 2018
ANNOUNCED BY
President Russell M. Nelson
GROUNDBREAKING
11 April 2020
GROUNDBREAKING PRESIDED BY
Elder Randall K. Bennett
DEDICATED
7 May 2023
DEDICATED BY
Elder Dallin H. Oaks
DEDICATION ORDER
177
LOCATION
10915 Staples Mill Rd
Glen Allen, Virginia 23060
United States
PHONE
(+1) 804-807-7790
Additional Facts
fact 1
fact 2
fact 3
Description
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History
pre announcement (area) history text
Announcement
The first temple to be constructed in the state of Virginia was announced by President Russell M. Nelson at the 188th Annual General Conference. The Temple was announced in conjunction with 6 other temples. This was the first set of announcements made by Nelson since being called and sustained as President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
ANNOUNCED ORDER
188
| Date | 2018 04 01 |
| By | Russell M. Nelson |
| Role | President |
| Via | General Conference |
⮜Preceded by Layton Utah
Followed by Russia⮞
Announced 2018 04 01
Site Purchase
Beginning in 2017, the Church began the purchase and assembly of three parcels along Staples Mill and Mountain roads for about $2.3 million, according to county property records. That includes an 8.1-acre parcel purchased from Marchetti Properties that will be home for the temple and meeting house.
The county assessed the combined properties at about $1.44 million.[1]O’Neal, J. Elias. “Plans Filed for 52,000-square-foot Mormon Temple Complex in Henrico – Richmond BizSense.” Richmond BizSense, 28 Mar. 2019, richmondbizsense.com/2019/03/27/plans-filed-52000-square-foot-mormon-temple-complex-henrico.
Plan Submittal
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints last week filed preliminary plans to construct a temple near the intersection of Staples Mill and Mountain roads in Henrico County – its first temple in Virginia.
Plans call for an 11-acre wooded lot at 10915 Staples Mill Road to be scrapped to make way for a two-story, 36,200-square-foot temple and an adjacent 16,200-square-foot meeting house. A small maintenance building also is proposed for the site, while an existing two-story residence at 4151 Mountain Road would remain.
The site will not require rezoning.[2] This information comes from: O’Neal, J. Elias. “Plans Filed for 52,000-square-foot Mormon Temple Complex in Henrico – Richmond BizSense.” Richmond BizSense, 28 Mar. 2019, richmondbizsense.com/2019/03/27/plans-filed-52000-square-foot-mormon-temple-complex-henrico. A search through the records of the City for that time period however did not turn up any meeting where such information was presented.
Location Announcement
On 28 August 2019, the location of the Richmond Virginia Temple were released to the public in conjunction with an open house held for Church members, neighbors, and journalists. A site plan showed the orientation of the temple, an adjoining meetinghouse, and a maintenance building.[3]Gephardt Daily Staff. “Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints shares renderings of Richmond, Va., Temple.” Gephardt Daily, 28 Aug. 2019, gephardtdaily.com/local/church-of-jesus-christ-of-latter-day-saints-shares-renderings-of-richmond-va-temple. Accessed 31 Aug. 2025.
Render Released
On 28 August 2019, the official exterior and interior renderings of the Richmond Virginia Temple were released to the public in conjunction with an open house held for Church members, neighbors, and journalists.[4]Gephardt Daily Staff. “Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints shares renderings of Richmond, Va., Temple.” Gephardt Daily, 28 Aug. 2019, gephardtdaily.com/local/church-of-jesus-christ-of-latter-day-saints-shares-renderings-of-richmond-va-temple. Accessed 31 Aug. 2025.

Groundbreaking Announced
On 23 January 2020 the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has announced groundbreaking dates for the Richmond Virginia Temple, the Alabang Philippines Temple and the Layton Utah Temple. The groundbreaking for the Richmond Virginia Temple will be held Saturday, April 11, 2020. Attendance at the site will be by invitation only. The groundbreaking service will be broadcast to stake centers in the temple district. Elder Randall K. Bennett, North America Northeast Area president, will preside.[5]“Groundbreaking Dates Announced for Temples in Virginia, the Philippines and Utah.” newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org, 23 Jan. 2020, newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/groundbreaking-dates-richmond-alabang-layton.
Groundbreaking
Elder Randall K. Bennett, a General Authority Seventy and president of the North America Northeast Area, offered the dedicatory prayer for the groundbreaking ceremony. The groundbreaking ceremony was kept to a small handful of leaders to comply with COVID-19 guidelines.
GROUNDBREAKING ORDER
183
| Date | 2020 04 11 |
| By | Randall K. Bennett |
| Role | Seventy |
| Attendees | ## |
⮜Preceded by Puebla Mexico
Followed by Layton Utah⮞
Dedication announced
On 14 November 2022 The First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints released dates for the open houses and dedications of two houses of the Lord in the United States: the Columbus Ohio Temple and the Richmond Virginia Temple.
Invited guests will tour the Richmond Virginia Temple from March 21 to March 24, 2023. The public open house will then run from Saturday, March 25, to Saturday, April 15, 2023, except for Sundays and Saturday, April 1 (general conference). Before the open house, a media day will be held on March 20, 2023.
The Richmond Virginia Temple will be dedicated on Sunday, May 7, 2023, in two sessions at 10 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time. President Dallin H. Oaks of the First Presidency will preside at the dedication. The dedicatory sessions will be broadcast to all units in the Richmond Virginia Temple district.[6]“Dedication Dates Released for Temples in Ohio and Virginia.” newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org, 14 Nov. 2022, newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/dedication-dates-released-for-two-temples-in-united-states.
Open House
The open house for the Richmond Virginia Temple began with a media day on Monday, March 20, followed by tours for invited guests from March 21–24, 2023.
During a media day for the Richmond Virginia Temple, before it was open to the public, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin toured the building. In his remarks at the event, he drew attention to how a house of the Lord — the state’s first — is now in “the first state to forge religious freedom into the fabric of our nation.”
This history stretches back to Thomas Jefferson, an American founding father who wrote the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, a forerunner to the First Amendment and constitutional protection of religious freedom.
“May this temple be a lasting symbol to all Virginians of our collective legacy of true religious freedom,” said Gov. Youngkin, “and give the Latter-day Saint community across Virginia and around the world a powerful central location to practice their faith.”[7]Toone, Trent. “President Dallin H. Oaks Dedicates the Richmond Virginia Temple.” Church News, 1 Feb. 2024, www.thechurchnews.com/temples/2023/5/7/23711254/president-dallin-h-oaks-dedicates-richmond-virginia-temple.
| Start Date | 2023 03 25 |
| End Date | 2023 04 15 |
| Days | 18 |
| Attendees | 46,500 |
| Per day | 2,583.3 |
Dedication
The Richmond Virginia Temple was dedicated by President Dallin H. Oaks, first counselor in the First Presidency, during two sessions on May 7, 2023. During the cornerstone ceremony on the same day, the Apostle said, “The most important idea about a cornerstone is that Jesus Christ Himself is the chief Cornerstone, setting the direction for the building at the key position in the foundation.”
Just after the start of the first dedicatory session, the choir sang “The Morning Breaks” as President Oaks and the other Church leaders came outside for the symbolic cornerstone ceremony. President Oaks invited young children from Maryland, Virginia and Georgia to participate in placing mortar around the cornerstone.
“The most important idea about a cornerstone is that Jesus Christ Himself is the chief cornerstone, setting the direction for the building at the key position in the foundation,” President Oaks said. “So it is with this temple.”
President Oaks was joined by his wife, Sister Kristen M. Oaks; Elder W. Mark Bassett, second counselor in the North America Northeast Area presidency and his wife, Sister Angela Bassett; Elder Kevin R. Duncan, executive director of the Church’s Temple Department and his wife, Sister Nancy Duncan; and Elder Michael John U. Teh, a General Authority Seventy, and his wife, Sister Grace Teh.
The dedicatory sessions were broadcast to all units in the temple district at 10:00 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.[8]Toone, Trent. “President Dallin H. Oaks Dedicates the Richmond Virginia Temple.” Church News, 1 Feb. 2024, www.thechurchnews.com/temples/2023/5/7/23711254/president-dallin-h-oaks-dedicates-richmond-virginia-temple.
DEDICATION ORDER
177
| Date | 2023 05 07 |
| By | Dallin H. Oaks |
| Role | 1st Counselor |
| Sessions | 2 |
| Attendees | # |
⮜Preceded by San Juan Puerto Rico
Followed by Helena Montana⮞
Dedicatory Prayer
Construction Duration
| Span | Duration |
|---|---|
| Announced to Groundbreaking | – y, – m, – d |
| Groundbreaking to Dedication | – y, – m, – d |
| Announced to Dedication | – y, – m, – d |
Dedicatory Order
GLOBAL
177
REGION
N. AM.
113
COUNTRY
US
81
STATE
VIRGINIA
1
COUNTY
HENRICO
1
CITY
GLEN ALLEN
1
Summary
The Richmond Virginia Temple was the first temple built in Virginia. 79 Temples announced, 4 scheduled for groundbreaking, 47 Temples under construction, and 9 temples scheduled for dedication.
Detail
Groundbreaking Announced
Announced
- Russia
- Cagayan de Oro Philippines
- Lagos Nigeria
- Budapest Hungary
- Benin City Nigeria
- Shanghai People’s Republic of China
- Dubai United Arab Emirates
- Tarawa Kiribati†
- São Paulo East Brazil
- Santa Cruz Bolivia
- Cali Colombia†
- Cape Town South Africa†
- Singapore†
- Oslo Norway
- Brussels Belgium
- Vienna Austria
- Kumasi Ghana
- Beira Mozambique
- Teton River Idaho
- Fort Worth Texas†
- Kaohsiung Taiwan†
- Santiago West Chile
- Vitória Brazil
- Cody Wyoming
- Tacloban City Philippines
- Monrovia Liberia
- Kananga Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Antananarivo Madagascar
- Culiacán Mexico
- La Paz Bolivia
- Modesto California†
- San Luis Potosí Mexico
- Mexico City Benemérito Mexico
- Tampa Florida†
- Knoxville Tennessee†
- Wellington New Zealand
- Santos Brazil
- Cleveland Ohio
- Austin Texas
- Barcelona Spain
- Maceió Brazil
- Brazzaville Republic of the Congo
- Birmingham England
- Cusco Peru
- Wichita Kansas
- Missoula Montana
- Grand Rapids Michigan
- Londrina Brazil
- Ribeirão Preto Brazil
- Lone Mountain Nevada
- Huehuetenango Guatemala
- Busan Korea
- Naga Philippines
- Santiago Philippines
- Eket Nigeria
- Chiclayo Peru
- Buenos Aires City Center Argentina
- Jacksonville Florida
- Prosper Texas
- Tacoma Washington
- Cuernavaca Mexico
- Pachuca Mexico
- Toluca Mexico
- Tula Mexico
- Charlotte North Carolina
- Retalhuleu Guatemala
- Iquitos Peru
- Teresina Brazil
- Natal Brazil
- Tuguegarao City Philippines
- Iloilo Philippines
- Jakarta Indonesia
- Hamburg Germany
- Lethbridge Alberta
- San Jose California
- Bakersfield California
- Springfield Missouri
- Winchester Virginia
- Harrisburg Pennsylvania
Dedication Announced
- Richmond Virginia
- Helena Montana
- Saratoga Springs Utah
- Brasília Brazil
- Bentonville Arkansas
- Moses Lake Washington
- Feather River California
- McAllen Texas
- Bangkok Thailand
Under Construction
- Abidjan Ivory Coast
- Urdaneta Philippines
- Lima Peru Los Olivos
- Puebla Mexico
- Layton Utah
- Alabang Philippines
- Auckland New Zealand
- Orem Utah
- San Pedro Sula Honduras
- Taylorsville Utah
- Salta Argentina
- Red Cliffs Utah
- Cobán Guatemala
- Davao Philippines
- Antofagasta Chile
- Bengaluru India
- Okinawa Japan
- Harare Zimbabwe
- Mendoza Argentina
- Deseret Peak Utah
- Tallahassee Florida
- Syracuse Utah
- Salvador Brazil
- Pittsburgh Pennsylvania
- Nairobi Kenya
- Neiafu Tonga
- Phnom Penh Cambodia
- Casper Wyoming
- Pago Pago American Samoa
- Bacolod Philippines
- Freetown Sierra Leone
- Bahía Blanca Argentina
- Grand Junction Colorado
- Lindon Utah
- Farmington New Mexico
- Elko Nevada
- Burley Idaho
- Smithfield Utah
- Yorba Linda California
- Lubumbashi Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Ephraim Utah
- Heber Valley Utah
- Willamette Valley Oregon
- Managua Nicaragua
- Miraflores Guatemala City Guatemala
- Torreón Mexico
- Querétaro Mexico
Rededication Announced
Under Renovation
Renovation Scheduled
Presidents and Matrons
| Temple President | Temple Matron | Years Served |
|---|---|---|
| Larry John Willis | Sandra Mae Bohjanen Willis | 2023– |
Details
Location
The Richmond Virginia Temple sits on a 12-acre wooded site at the corner of Staples Mill Road and Mountain Road near Glen Allen in Henrico County.
Site
The paths, lighting, and landscaping draw inspiration from the gardens and grounds of historic Williamsburg, Virginia. Local varieties of trees, hedges, and flowers were selected for the temple grounds including dogwood, magnolia, white oak, boxwood, and Virginia bluebells. The dogwood, Virginia’s state tree and flower, is featured in patterns inside and outside the temple.
Exterior
The temple design reflects a blend of Georgian, Federal, and Jeffersonian architecture.
Cladding
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Water Course
Windows
text
Spandrel panel
Exterior Finish
text
Architectural Features
text
| Feet | Meters | |
|---|---|---|
| Height | # | # |
| To Shoulder | # | # |
| Width | # | # |
| Length | # | # |
| Footprint | # | # |
| Heading | Calc |
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 | # |
| Type | dome, steeple, tower, spire |
| shape | # |
| Tower shape |
Moroni
text

| 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: | Gold |
| Placed: | 2021 04 13 |
| Faces: | West |
Interior
text
text
Entry
text
| Area | – f2 (- m2) |
| Floors above grade | |
| Floors below Grade | |
| Baptistries | |
| Initiatories | |
| Endowment Rooms | |
| Sealing Rooms |
Baptistry
text
| Baptistries: | 1 |
| Location: | – |
| Exterior Windows: | – |
| Artwork: | – |
| Artwork Type: | – |
| Oxen: | – |
| Type: | – |
| Hoof: | – |
| Color: | – |
| Layout: | – |
| Font Exterior: | – |
| Interior: | – |
| Shape: | – |
| Bowl Shape: | – |
| Pillar: | – |
| Stairs: | – |
| Font Well: | – |
Initiatory Spaces
text
| Style | detached, attached, combined |
| Type | stationary, progressive |
| Rooms | # |
Instruction Rooms
text
| Rooms | # |
| Type | # |
| Capacity | # |
| Murals | y/n |
| Total Muraled Rooms | # |
| Mural Type |
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
TEMPLES IN UNITED STATES by state
Total: 158
TEMPLES IN NORTH AMERICA by country
Total: 209
Sources and Citations
References
| ↑1 | O’Neal, J. Elias. “Plans Filed for 52,000-square-foot Mormon Temple Complex in Henrico – Richmond BizSense.” Richmond BizSense, 28 Mar. 2019, richmondbizsense.com/2019/03/27/plans-filed-52000-square-foot-mormon-temple-complex-henrico. |
|---|---|
| ↑2 | This information comes from: O’Neal, J. Elias. “Plans Filed for 52,000-square-foot Mormon Temple Complex in Henrico – Richmond BizSense.” Richmond BizSense, 28 Mar. 2019, richmondbizsense.com/2019/03/27/plans-filed-52000-square-foot-mormon-temple-complex-henrico. A search through the records of the City for that time period however did not turn up any meeting where such information was presented. |
| ↑3, ↑4 | Gephardt Daily Staff. “Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints shares renderings of Richmond, Va., Temple.” Gephardt Daily, 28 Aug. 2019, gephardtdaily.com/local/church-of-jesus-christ-of-latter-day-saints-shares-renderings-of-richmond-va-temple. Accessed 31 Aug. 2025. |
| ↑5 | “Groundbreaking Dates Announced for Temples in Virginia, the Philippines and Utah.” newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org, 23 Jan. 2020, newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/groundbreaking-dates-richmond-alabang-layton. |
| ↑6 | “Dedication Dates Released for Temples in Ohio and Virginia.” newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org, 14 Nov. 2022, newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/dedication-dates-released-for-two-temples-in-united-states. |
| ↑7, ↑8 | Toone, Trent. “President Dallin H. Oaks Dedicates the Richmond Virginia Temple.” Church News, 1 Feb. 2024, www.thechurchnews.com/temples/2023/5/7/23711254/president-dallin-h-oaks-dedicates-richmond-virginia-temple. |
Last updated on: 31 August 2025
