Lambertseter Church
Lambertseter kirke
Lambertseter Church is located in Oslo
Lambertseter Church
Lambertseter Church
Lambertseter Church is located in Norway
Lambertseter Church
Lambertseter Church
59°52′12.385″N 10°48′48.996″E / 59.87010694°N 10.81361000°E / 59.87010694; 10.81361000
LocationLangbølgen 33,
Lambertseter,
Oslo,
CountryNorway
Denomination Church of Norway
ChurchmanshipEvangelical Lutheran
Websitekirken.no/lambertseter
History
StatusParish church
Consecrated1966
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Architect(s)Harald Hille
Specifications
Capacity400 seats
Materialsbrick, concrete
Administration
DioceseDiocese of Oslo[1]
DeanerySøndre Aker
ParishLambertseter

Lambertseter Church is a church center in Oslo, Norway.

The church center from 1966 contains distinctive art in the church room, congregation hall and chapel. The seven meter high altarpiece is in brass, copper, steel, iron and glass delivered to the church's consecration, one of the artist Finn Christensen's main works.[1][2]

The wall in the congregation hall is adorned with a large work of glass and steel by Benny Motzfeldt on loan from the Oslo municipal art collection from 2003. The chapel has an altarpiece by Tor Lindrupsen (2000) who also made the sandblasted window in the choir at the church room's baptismal font (1997). In 1999, eight new chandeliers were mounted into the church. The church organ has 20 voices. The stone reliefs on the southern long wall are created by Einar Stoltenberg.[1][3][4]

The church building is in reinforced concrete, the facades are dazzled with brick. The roofs are flat.

Next to the church is a separate bell tower. There are three church bells, created by Olsen Nauen Bell Foundry in 1966. The bells are named "Faith", "Hope" and the largest church bell, "Love".[1][3]

Lambertseter Church is listed by the Norwegian Directorate for Cultural Heritage.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Lambertseter kirke Norske kirker (in Norwegian)
  2. Lambertseter kirke Kirkesøk (in Norwegian)
  3. 1 2 Lambertseter kirke Oslo byleksikon (in Norwegian)
  4. M.C. Kirkebøe: Oslos kirker i gammel og ny tid (New ed. by K.A. Tvedt og Ø. Reisegg, Kunnskapsforlaget, 2007), pp 63, 20 (in Norwegian)
  5. Lambertseter kirke / kirkested, Kulturminnesøk by the Norwegian Directorate for Cultural Heritage (in Norwegian)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.