The Beezer Brothers—Pittsburgh’s Twin Architects—Revisit one of their Legacy Projects and Find a Brewery Instead of a Church
Architects
Louis Beezer, and his twin brother Michael died more than eight decades ago, but
on a sunny June early morning in 2016, their spirit forms stood side-by-side in
silent observation from the old closed balcony of one of the grand structures
their firm designed—St. John the Baptist Catholic Church in the Lawrenceville
neighborhood of Pittsburgh.
“I
still can’t get used to it and I don’t know whether to laugh or cry,” Michael
whispered to Louis as they gazed down upon the altered interior of what was one
of their crowning Pittsburgh achievements and the early morning light streamed
in from the magnificent multi-colored glass of the gigantic round rose window
behind them.
“At
least it is still standing,” reasoned Louis. “That’s more than we can say about
so many of our other buildings.”
“But
a brewery and restaurant?” Michael answered. “Nothing was further from my mind
when we worked with the Diocese and old Bishop Phelan on this church. Now, they
call it the Church Brew Works.”
You shouldn't let it bother you because John Comes did most of the design work anyway," Louis said, recalling the service of another once-famous but now largely forgotten Pittsburgh architect who worked as a designer for the brothers' firm in 1902. "I wonder why we never see him around on our little visits."
"My guess is he didn't ask for that favor," Michael said.
When the devout Catholic brothers from Altoona, PA were young and deeply immersed in working with Catholic Dioceses in Pennsylvania, Washington State, and California, they had agreed that when they both died, they would ask a favor of the afterlife--to visit some of their favorite buildings once a year on the date the
corner stone for each building was laid. Louis passed in 1929 and Michael followed in 1933. From 1933 onward, their spirits made the rounds. Every year, there were fewer buildings to visit.
corner stone for each building was laid. Louis passed in 1929 and Michael followed in 1933. From 1933 onward, their spirits made the rounds. Every year, there were fewer buildings to visit.
They
had a particular affection for St. John. As with most of their projects, the
Beezers poured a lot of attention into the new church. Even as their colleague
John Comès tackled the basic design work, the Beezer Brothers supervised the
building site, and acted as construction managers as they did on most of their
major projects.
The
cornerstone of St. John the Baptist was laid on a hot June 1, 1902 on
Pittsburgh’s Liberty Avenue in Lawrenceville. A good-sized crowd was on hand
and it was dotted with lacy white parasols held aloft as barriers to the sun by
women wearing white gloves, flowing skirts, and gigantic floral hats. The men
wore stiff winged shirt collars, black ties and black suits.
And so,
in accordance with their wish, Michael and Louis returned every June 1 to the
Northern Italian style architecture of St. John the Baptist Church. They
watched quietly from the
old balcony where the church’s massive pipe organ was
played for 90 years’ worth of weddings, funerals, christenings, Christmas Eves,
and daily masses.
The steps leading to the pipe organ balcony |
Much
remained of the splendor of the old St. John during their 2016 visit, just as
much had changed.
The
magnificent stained glass windows depicting religious scenes still glowed with
vivid color in the daylight. The names of the Pittsburgh families who donated
funds more than 100 years ago to finance the installations still stand out
proudly because they were incorporated into the colorful designs.
Heavy,
stone columns that featured decorative carved tops still held up detailed brick
archways and stood majestically on opposing sides of the great sanctuary. Their
scrubbed surfaces seemed brighter than ever to the brothers.
The
eight original gold-painted lanterns that hung proudly below the brick arches
from great chains continued to illuminate the details of the hand-painted
cypress beams on the high vaulted ceiling—just as the architects directed in
their drawings more than 100 years ago.
The
rows of polished oak pews, however, had been significantly altered. Now, they
no longer sat facing forward to accommodate a congregation. They had been cut
from their original 24-foot lengths to 54-inch lengths to form mini pews and
then arranged to sit on two sides of big wooden tabletops forming rows of
restaurant booths.
The
planks that were salvaged from shortening of the pews were used to build a long
bar on one side of the old sanctuary.
The
original Douglas Fir floors, which, for the last 50 years of the building’s
life as a church had been covered with plywood, glowed with a reddish orange
hue from an extensive restoration.
One
of the old confessionals was completely gone and replaced with an entryway into
what the brothers came to understand was now a kitchen. A second confessional
sat behind the new bar on the left side of the sanctuary and held Church Brew Works
merchandise for sale like tee-shirts and baseball hats. That was a change that
made both brothers scratch their heads in contemplation when they first saw it
in 1996.
Big
hulking silver vats now stood along a sidewall behind the bar that presumably
held the wide variety of beers. Another set of copper vats, tubes and other
brewing mechanisms sat behind a glass wall at the far end of the sanctuary
where priests once said mass and delivered homilies, altar boys hustled to do
their solemn duties, and countless couples took vows of marriage.
“I
have to admit that it has been a spectacular conversion,” Louis confessed to
his brother every time they visited since 1996.
“I
was somewhat dismayed at first,” Michael admitted. “But this is better than the
wrecking ball.”
During
their 83 annual visits, the Beezers observed changes to the neighborhood, the
city, and to the people as well as to their beloved old church.
During the Great Depression,
they witnessed parishioners working together under the guidance of the priests
and nuns of St. John collect and then distribute food to needy members of the
Lawrenceville community.
In March 1936, the rivers of
Pittsburgh overflowed their banks in the largest flood anyone had ever seen,
causing widespread damage and homelessness throughout the city and the
neighborhood of St. John. The Beezers, during their visit three months after
the flood, saw the people of St. John open their church to accommodate flood
victims who still had to sleep on the polished oak pews because they had no
place else to go.
In the 1940s, they heard the
prayers of hundreds of families who sent their young men off to war and watched
the church mourn the men who didn’t come home.
And finally, they watched the
fortunes and population of the neighborhood decline. It was the late 1950s when
the industrial growth that brought steel plants and other manufacturers to the
Lawrenceville neighborhood began a reversal of fortune. The mills gradually
began to close and jobs began to disappear. Families moved away and the
congregation of St. John dwindled.
In the 1970s, the Beezers
watched the parish close its school. By 1993, the Diocese of Pittsburgh was
forced to reorganize, closing and combining parishes. On their June 1, 1993
visit, the Beezers found their beloved church building deserted with boards
over the windows and locks on the doors. That year, they gazed out over the
abandoned sanctuary and asked themselves if this visit would be their last.
There wasn’t much for them to
see on their visits of 1994 and 1995, but when they returned in 1996, the
transformation from church to brew works and restaurant was complete.
The Beezer brothers had left
Pittsburgh in 1907, setting up shop in Seattle with a branch office in San
Francisco. They thrived as they continued designing homes, banks, and office
buildings. But, they never strayed from their main work of designing churches,
rectories and convents for their beloved Roman Catholic Church—and they would
never stray far from them even in death.
John Comès, the designer who
worked for the Beezers in 1902 and played the major role in St. John the
Baptist Church, arrived in Pittsburgh in 1896 and remained there as a leading
architect with a specialty in church design until his death at 49 in 1922. By then,
Comès had become the “go-to” expert on church design and was sought out by
bishops across the nation.
The Church Brew Works, named
“Best Large Brewpub in America” in 2012 at the Great American Beer Festival, is
now in its 21st year. Owned by Sean Casey, the 8,000-square foot
former church continues to attract large crowds who take in the sweet smells of
wort from brewing vessels mixed with the aromas of an eclectic American
Regional cuisine. Names for the hand-crafted beers reflect the heritage of the
majestic old structure. They include Celestial Gold, Pipe Organ Pale Ale, and Pious
Monk Dunkel, many of which have won national awards.
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