Institute of Christ the King · Reno, Nevada
A vision for a permanent sacred presence in one of America's fastest-growing cities — a Catholic church campus rooted in tradition, beauty, and enduring purpose.
The Vision
Reno, Nevada is one of the fastest-growing metropolitan regions in the United States. Yet amid this growth, there is no permanent sacred presence rooted in the full depth of the Catholic tradition. St. Joseph Oratory — an apostolate of the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest — exists to change that.
This is not a construction project. It is an act of civilization. The Institute's charism calls for beauty as a form of evangelization — churches that speak before a word is spoken, that endure long after their builders are gone, that form the spiritual imagination of generations yet unborn.
We are seeking a world-class architect — not merely a competent practitioner, but someone capable of expressing the Institute's culture and charism in an American context. Someone who builds for four hundred years, not forty.
Built to outlast its builders
Every material, every proportion, every detail chosen with the understanding that this structure will serve the faithful for centuries. No compromise for convenience. No concession to trend.
Craftsmanship as an act of worship
Stone, masonry, carved wood, and wrought iron. The finest materials available, worked by craftsmen who understand that their labor is an offering. Quality that deepens with age rather than diminishing.
A complete sacred environment
Architecture, liturgy, art, and community in unity. Every element considered as part of a coherent whole — not assembled piecemeal over decades of compromise.
"The great churches of Christendom were not built by committees weighing cost against convenience. They were built by people who believed that God deserved the finest work of human hands — and that beauty itself was a form of prayer."
Conceptual Scenarios
Each scenario represents a distinct approach to building a sacred presence in Reno — different in scale and method, unified in purpose and quality.

Plate I
Excellence
Hand-cut limestone and Romanesque masonry. A chapel that speaks the language of European sacred architecture, translated faithfully into the high desert of Nevada. Rich in articulation, permanent in character, and deeply rooted in the inheritance of Western Christendom.

Plate II
Intelligent Design
Simple but never cheap. A structure of beautiful proportions, designed from the outset to grow with the community without ever appearing temporary or incomplete. Brick, stone trim, and classical lines that demonstrate stewardship without sacrificing dignity.

Plate III
Growth
A phased vision for a complete Catholic campus: church, rectory, school, shrine, grotto, cemetery, and processional spaces. Beginning with the transept crossing and expanding over decades into a full sacred precinct — planned from the first stone as a unified whole.
Architectural Direction
The selection of an architect is among the most consequential decisions in this undertaking. We are seeking someone whose work reflects not merely technical competence, but a genuine understanding of sacred architecture — its proportions, its symbolism, its capacity to orient the soul toward transcendence.
Design Principles
A church that is genuinely beautiful does not merely please the eye — it makes an argument. It declares that the transcendent is real, that the sacred deserves the finest human effort, and that God is worthy of our best. Beauty is not ornament; it is theology made visible.
To build well is to build once. The false economy of cheap construction — materials that degrade, proportions that age poorly — costs more in the long run and communicates less. True stewardship means investing in quality that compounds over centuries.
The great cathedrals of Europe were built by people who knew they would never see them completed. They built anyway — for their grandchildren, and their grandchildren's grandchildren. This is the spirit that must animate every decision: not what serves us now, but what endures.
A church is not a building that houses a liturgy. It is a liturgy made stone. Every arch, every window, every axis of the plan participates in the act of worship. Architecture, music, art, and community form a single coherent whole — or they form nothing at all.
Voices of the Vision
"What strikes me most is the commitment to permanence. We live in an age of the disposable — this project is a deliberate act against that spirit."
— A parishioner of St. Joseph Oratory
"The Institute's charism is precisely what Reno needs. Not another building, but a place — a place that will shape souls for generations."
— A supporter of the Traditional Latin Mass
"I have watched this community grow. The faith is there. The vision is there. What is needed now is the stone."
— A longtime friend of the Institute
For Builders & Craftsmen
We are seeking contractors, masons, carpenters, ironworkers, glaziers, and craftsmen of every relevant trade who wish to participate in the construction of St. Joseph Oratory.
This is not a bid solicitation. It is an invitation to those who understand that building a church is different from building anything else — and who want their work to be part of something that will endure for centuries.
Project management · Scheduling · Subcontractor coordination · Site supervision
Masonry · Stone carving · Carpentry · Ironwork · Stained glass · Plastering · Tile
Architecture · Structural engineering · Liturgical art · Organ building · Landscape design
Participate
The construction of a great church is one of the few acts available to any generation that genuinely transcends it. Those who participate become part of something that will outlast them — a gift to the city of Reno, to the faithful of this diocese, and to the Church universal.
We welcome conversations with those who share this vision — whether your interest is financial, professional, or simply a desire to be part of something enduring. There is no pressure here, only an open door.
Direct Contact
Jeff Lynch
Benefactor Engagement