Church prepares for £500k revamp (From thisisoxfordshire)
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Church prepares for £500k revamp
1:00pm Saturday 12th January 2013 in News
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The Rev Jane Sherwood, left, and children and families worker Maddie Buchanan shift a decorated cross as the church contents are removed to storage watched by Rita Nambooze, one of the church’s congregation
THE process of packing up a South Oxford church has begun ahead of its £500,000 revamp next month.
The last Sunday service at St Luke’s Church will be on February 10, and the vicar at the church, the Rev Jane Sherwood, is spending this month boxing up the building’s contents.
During the building work – which is expected to finish by the end of October – Sunday services and church groups will meet at the South Oxford Christian Centre in nearby Wytham Street.
Ms Sherwood said: “We have quite a few boxes packed already, we are gradually working our way through.”
But she added: “We have quite a long way to go.”
Church groups, apart from the drop-in session, are not meeting this month to allow the church’s contents to be packed up ready for the removal company.
Ms Sherwood said members of the church’s congregation and community have helped with the packing.
A smaller side hall is being added to the church in Canning Crescent to include new office and storage space, a kitchen and bathroom facilities following years of fundraising.
Ms Sherwood said: “We are very excited. It has been a long project – we have been working on it for seven years now.”
The church still has to raise another £25,000 to fund the revamp.
St Luke’s launched the drive to redevelop the building two years ago after city councillors approved the plans in 2010.
Find out more or make a donation by visiting stlukesoxford.org.uk
Comments(6)
drate
says...
6:20pm Sat 12 Jan 13
xjohnx
says...
12:54pm Sun 13 Jan 13
What about the poor and needy!!!
I bet the daily congregation is less than ten people. What a waste.
At the end of the day the Church won't even own the property!!!
drate
says...
3:46pm Sun 13 Jan 13
xjohnx wrote:Erm, I'm not sure you understand what St Luke's is about,,..it functions as a community centre as well as church, and does in fact have a particular emphasis on activities, support and development for vulnerable people. We see ourselves as an all week church, and have approximately 30 in the congregation, with around 100 coming through the doors each week. Have a look at our website. Perhaps its worth doing your homework before making comments lile that!
Half a million pounds for renovations???
What about the poor and needy!!!
I bet the daily congregation is less than ten people. What a waste.
At the end of the day the Church won't even own the property!!!
Myron Blatz
says...
12:38am Mon 14 Jan 13
drate
says...
9:11am Wed 16 Jan 13
Myron Blatz wrote:Yes it does, and its a great place - St Luke's has strong links with Gill Garratt and SOCA and we sometimes help with art events there or they come and support activities at St Luke's.
I'm all for churches and their respective parishioners helping to maintain such facilities where needed, but doesn't South Oxford already have a marvellous and highly successful non-denominational, multi-ethnic, non-political Community Centre - owned by Oxford City Council, but funded and managed by a charitable-status Community Association of local volunteers?
We are also multi ethnic and welcoming to those of all faith or no faith, and have a great band of voulnteers.
However, it runs different types of activities and fulfils different needs. St Luke's has a particular emphasis on youth and children's work, support of vulnerable people through benefits advice/training/coun
selling/ new opportunities and by simply belonging to a community.While that may happen too at SOCC, Cold Harbour, though a bit down the road, is a very different area with its own particular needs. It is also a very overlooked community with nothing in the area for local people apart from the Nisa shop/Post Office and a burnt out pub. It is an area that rates highly in deprivation as show in 2 recent Oxford City Council small area surveys, plus the evidence is, many local people in Cold Harbour would consider SOCC too far away to use regularly.
Myron Blatz says...
4:18pm Sat 12 Jan 13