The Sanctuary of Fatima juts out above the rooftops in Roma Norte. The striking modernist church was built between 1958 and 1962 for the Theatine congregation. The architect was Nicolás Mariscal, brother of the somewhat better known Federico Ernesto Mariscal. Yet Nicolás had designed in his own right, decades earlier, the stridently neoclassical Monumental Tribune in Chapultepec Park.
For visitors from out of town, the church certainly catches the eye. He is a prominent representative of our own section on 20th century religious architecture. The Sanctuary of Fatima has a central entrance flanked by two pole-shaped pillars. The huge cross not only announces the Christian vocation, but acts as a handle that holds the entire ceiling together. Inside, the church is as operatic as you might hope.
Badly damaged in the 1985 earthquake, the Church was saved with a serious structural intervention by José Creixell and José Hanhausen. Creixell is better-known for his own Church of the Immaculate Conception in Iztapalapa.
Nearest at 0.06 kms.
Nearest at 0.13 kms.
Nearest at 0.22 kms.
The most spectacular modernist church in the Jardín Balbuena
A giant Modernist church in the colonia Portales Oriente . . .
A circular modernist church on the heights over Álvaro Obregón . . .
A modernist church in a giant 20th century neighborhood . . .
A modernist triumph and neighborhood church in Espartaco, Coyoacán . . .