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Campus Liturgies

Holy Week in the Chapel of St. Ignatius


March 28  
       Palm Sunday, 11am & 9pm

March 29         Communal Reconciliation, 7:30pm 
                         With Individual Confession

March 30         Taizé, 7pm

April 1             Holy Thursday,7:30pm 
                        Solemn Mass of the Lord’s Supper

April 2             Stations of the Cross, 1pm 
                        Good Friday, 3pm 
                        Liturgy of the Passion

April 3             Solemn Easter Vigil, 9:30pm 
                        Lighting of the Easter Fire 
                        the Narrative of Redemption
                        the Initiation of our elect, the Eucharist

April 4              Easter Sunday, 11am & 9pm

Weekday Masses:

      7:15 am in Immaculate Conception Chapel (2nd Flr., Admin. Bldg.)

12:05 pm in the Chapel of Saint Ignatius

Sunday Masses:

11 am & 9 pm in the Chapel of Saint Ignatius

There are no 7:15 am Weekday Masses and no 9 pm Sunday Masses in the summer and during academic breaks.

For more information, please contact G DeCastro at (206) 296-5588.

 

About the Chapel

Architect Steven Holl chose "A Gathering of Different Lights" as the guiding concept for the design of the Chapel of St. Ignatius. This metaphor describes Seattle Universitys mission and it also refers to St. Ignatius vision of the spiritual life as comprising many interior lights and darknesses, which he called consolations and desolations.

Holl conceived of the chapel as "seven bottles of light in a stone box," with each bottle or vessel of light corresponding to a focal aspect of Catholic worship. Light passes through each bottle in a specific area of the building to define physical and spiritual spaces with pools of clear and colored light.

Chapel Space
Color Field
Lens
Processional Area
white
clear
Narthex
red
green
Choir
green
red
Nave East / West
yellow
blue
blue
yellow
Blessed Sacrament Chapel
orange
purple
Reconciliation Chapel
purple
orange
Bell Tower / Reflection Pool
natural light
water

 

During the day each part of the chapel will glow with colored light from two sources. Light bouncing off color fields painted on the back of suspended baffles creates a halo of light on the surrounding walls, while light passing through colored glass lenses in the exterior windows and openings in the baffles casts onto the chapel walls and floor. Interior lighting will create a similar effect at night, transforming the chapel into a beacon of multicolored light radiating outward to the campus and city.

The chapel design and construction have, from the outset, been focused on the spiritual needs of students. Students contributions were central to the design process. "I think there has been more student input on this job than any other university project I have done," said Holl. Student comments helped anchor the design, and according to Holl, the result was "a design that would be forward looking, but anchored in the past."

Holls plan for the chapel won a design award from the New York Chapter of the American Institute of Architects, and the scale model of the chapel has been selected to become part of the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

Most of the buildings furnishings and architectural details were designed by the architect and fabricated by local artisans.

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Virtual Tour

Steve Holl
Steven Holl

Early Concept Sketch
Early Concept Sketch

 

East Nave Baffle
East Nave Baffle