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Christ Church gives blessing to office purchase

Before members can meet their spiritual needs at Sunday services, they have an earthly need: more parking on the ground.


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  • | 6:00 a.m. April 15, 2015
The office building at 6350 Gulf of Mexico Drive houses five tenants. Eventually, the church will transition the building to its own office space and a meeting facility for church members. Photo by Kurt Schultheis
The office building at 6350 Gulf of Mexico Drive houses five tenants. Eventually, the church will transition the building to its own office space and a meeting facility for church members. Photo by Kurt Schultheis
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Christ Church of Longboat Key, Presbyterian parishioners sometimes show up on Sundays for church but never make it into the pews. Instead, they leave frustrated after circling the parking lot and realizing there’s nowhere to park. 

The problem is severe enough that the congregation decided to purchase a neighboring commercial office building to the south for additional parking. 

The Rev. Norman Pritchard told the Longboat Observer Monday approximately 100 members in attendance at Sunday’s church service unanimously approved a $1.1 million purchase of the 1.3-acre property that held the former Wedebrock Real Estate Co. office at 6350 Gulf of Mexico Drive from Samuel and Hilda Hood, of Canada. 

The building currently houses Longboat Key Financial & Insurance Group, RJV Hospitality Services, Longboat Title Services, Attorney D. Turner Matthews and RVA Resort Vacations. 

 “It’s all about the parking spaces,” Pritchard said.  “It’s our primary reason for the purchase.”

The church and its offices, which sit at 6400 Gulf of Mexico Drive, currently have 102 parking spots on site. 

“It’s just not enough parking spaces for a seasonal congregation that sees attendance rise in season,” Pritchard said.  “So we’re fixing it.”

The church already had an agreement in place to use 20 parking spaces on the site on the north side of the building this season. And on Easter Sunday, the church got permission to use the entire site for parking.

“We managed to get 50 cars on the site on Easter,” Pritchard said. “That’s a big help.”

The church plans to honor leases that exist for current tenants before it transitions the 8,476 square feet of office space into a future office and meeting facility space for members. 

“The building also provides storage opportunities,” Pritchard said. “But that’s for future consideration and development down the line.”

The church made the initial exploratory offer to buy the property, which wasn’t for sale, five weeks ago.

“It all happened so fast,” Pritchard said. 

Christ Church, though, is known for moving quickly.

The 10-year-old congregation that started meeting in 2005 at the Bayfront Park pavilion moved to Mediterranean Plaza within a year. A year later, parishioners began serious discussions about building a worship center. 

By 2009, the congregation had raised more than $4.5 million toward a new building as part of its Just Imagine fundraising campaign, and a groundbreaking for the 278-seat church was held in August 2010.

To purchase the office building, the congregation started its Just Imagine II fundraising campaign, which aims to raise $2.5 million over a three-year period to acquire additional parking through the property purchase and pay off the $1.75 million debt remaining from the church’s construction. Pritchard said retiring the church building debt will allow the church to free up an additional $200,000 annually for church mission and outreach purposes. 

“We have already raised one-third of our goal,” said Christ Church member and fundraising calling committee member John Wild. 

Pritchard, the former pastor at Kirk in the Hills in Bloomfield, Mich., said it’s unheard of for a congregation to accomplish what Christ Church has done in 10 years. 

“I can’t believe how vigorous and active the congregation is,” Pritchard said. “It’s really quite amazing,”

Christ Church member John Dixon said the congregation is known for acting when the time is right.

“We didn’t want people leaving without being able to worship, so we stepped up,” Dixon said. 

 

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