For sale: Hundreds of abandoned churches; great prices, need work

In 2020, the median size of a congregation at an American church had shrunk to just 65, with countless empty buildings left behind

    • Since about 2000, the number of Americans who belong to a church, synagogue or mosque has plummeted from around 70 per cent to around 47 per cent in 2021.
    • Since about 2000, the number of Americans who belong to a church, synagogue or mosque has plummeted from around 70 per cent to around 47 per cent in 2021. PHOTO: NYTIMES
    Published Wed, Oct 30, 2024 · 03:11 PM

    WHEN Louis Cahill was growing up in southern Virginia, a neighbour bought an old Catholic chapel and turned it into a home, which fascinated him. So in 2022, when he and his wife Kathy were looking towards retirement, they decided to do the same. They were enamoured with the soaring ceilings and massive timber beams found in houses of worship across the South.

    “They build churches that way for a reason,” said Louis Cahill, 62. “To uplift the spirit and to make people feel inspired.”

    From their home base in Atlanta, the couple – both of whom grew up religious and eventually became atheists – scoured the Southeast. Finally, on a scouting trip last year, they stumbled upon the former Deyton Bend United Methodist Church in Green Mountain, North Carolina, a bohemian community in the Blue Ridge Mountains. The 3,127-square-foot brick structure, built in 1943 on about an acre, had just one bedroom. There was a kitchen downstairs, a meeting room, an open common space and a screened porch. It had been listed for US$325,000 in May 2023, then reduced to US$275,000 a few months later.

    “There was something familiar and comfortable about the building,” said Kathy Cahill, who grew up Methodist. “It just smells like a church, which I really like.”

    The Cahills bought it last November for just US$232,000, joining a wave of buyers who are scooping up abandoned churches from coast to coast as congregations wither and disappear. Since about 2000, the number of Americans who belong to a church, synagogue or mosque has plummeted from around 70 per cent to around 47 per cent in 2021. The decline has been attributed to several colliding factors, including younger Americans rejecting organised religion, the rise of regional megachurches, internal church schisms, and even the Covid pandemic.

    Small churches have been especially vulnerable. In 2020, the median size of a congregation at an American church had shrunk to just 65, with countless empty buildings left behind.

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    “There were only three of us left by the time we made the decision to close up the church,” said Travis Abernathy, 81, one of the last congregants at the Deyton Bend United Methodist.

    After he and the other two members decided to join another church and sell off the building in Green Mountain, they wanted a new congregation to come in and take it over, but struggled to find any takers. That’s when the Cahills showed up. “We were glad to sell it to Louis and Kathy,” Abernathy said. “We couldn’t have chosen someone better than them to come and take care of this place.”

    The Cahills have budgeted around US$150,000 for renovations, which will include a new roof and a wall to transect the main hall to create living spaces. The primary bedroom will replace the raised altar platform, and they’ll build a loft under the timber beams to serve as a library. Louis Cahill is repurposing the pews, some of which he’s making into headboards or using as dining room seating, and the altar, which he’s transforming into a bar. “If you think about it, it is a purpose-built table for pouring wine,” he said.

    Despite converting the church into a home, the couple see themselves as stewards of a community pillar. They gave many of the pews to members of the dispersed congregation, and they repaired the old belfry, which had gone silent years ago. They now ring the bell on Sundays – a welcome return of a familiar sound in Green Mountain.

    “We had a neighbour come visit, a woman who was very involved with the church, and she asked if the bell was staying,” Louis Cahill said. They assured her it was, then asked if she wanted to ring it herself. “She was giddy,” he said. “There’s something about the sound of that bell ringing that is so joyful.”

    As a market emerges for private buyers with a taste for belfries and grand facades, ideas abound for how to turn a church into something else: St Mary Magdalene Church, in Homestead, Pennsylvania, became a ropes course. In St Louis, the abandoned St Liborius Catholic Church was turned into a skatepark by a community group. (St Liborius burned down last year.)

    “There’s no question that there are more churches for sale today than a few years ago,” said Eric Knowles, who leads the religious and educational facilities group at the brokerage Kidder Mathews. He estimates there are roughly 1,100 former churches currently for sale in the United States, but the design idiosyncrasies don’t always lend themselves to commercial conversions. “If a small, rural church doesn’t have parking then it has a pretty limited commercial conversion potential, which means most of the time it ends up becoming a residence.”

    Churches are typically cheaper than conventional homes on a price-per-square-foot basis, but they tend to sit on the market much longer. Prospective buyers often must navigate a complex rezoning process and significant renovations. “Those 100-year-old churches often have historic designations, so developers aren’t as attracted to them, which means there’s lower demand,” Knowles said.

    Out in Michigan, Mike Messier has been selling church properties for more than 40 years. At first, he said, most of his business involved churches selling to other churches. But that has changed. “Now we’re seeing a lot more conversions to schools, day care centres and residences,” said Messier, who works with Real Estate Professional Services in Utica, Michigan. “There are people who know what it takes, but it can still be very expensive.”

    Churches often lack bedrooms, a kitchen or adequate bathrooms. Older ones present the same challenges as any neglected home, including electrical and plumbing issues. It’s a lot for any buyer to take on.

    Honouring a community that feels some sense of loss can be the secret ingredient in these conversions. Last month in North Carolina, the Cahills’ home was severely damaged in the flooding caused by Hurricane Helene. Access to drinking water and electricity has been scarce. The couple have been helping their neighbours recover.

    “It was amazing to see everyone pull together,” Louis Cahill said. “We really feel bonded to this community now. All the problems we have with the house can be fixed. There are blessings in everything.”

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