Centennial church, destroyed by St. Louis tornado, will rebuild campus in Fountain Park

Centennial church, destroyed by St. Louis tornado, will rebuild campus in Fountain Park

ST. LOUIS — A church in the Fountain Park neighborhood announced plans on Wednesday to demolish the more than 80-year-old structure and rebuild a church-and-social-services campus on the same site, almost two weeks after an EF-3 tornado collapsed the steeple, killing one woman and trapping three others inside.

The reconstruction efforts of Centennial Christian Church, at 4950 Fountain Avenue, include a multipurpose worship and gathering space, commercial and coworking spaces for local entrepreneurs, a health clinic, affordable housing and green spaces.

The Rev. Dr. Dietra Wise Baker said the church’s existing foundation can no longer support a structure above it.

“We can’t rebuild it. It would cost millions of dollars to rebuild it. We can do something better,” she said. “You don’t want to just build a church, that’s not helpful anymore. It needs to be something that is helpful to the community.”

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The demolition and reconstruction will take at least four years, she said. Insurance would cover a portion of the reconstruction costs, but the church will have to raise the majority.

Three regional and national religious organizations with ties to Centennial — the National Benevolent Association, Disciples of Christ Pension Fund and National Convocation of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) — will each donate $10,000 to the church’s recovery. Centennial is part of the Disciples of Christ denomination.

Metropolitan Congregations United, a group of area churches, pledged to raise $100,000 for Centennial and neighborhood residents.

“What took a storm mere minutes to tear down, will take a generation to rebuild,” Rev. David Woodard, associate regional minister for the Christian Church of Mid-America, said Wednesday at a press conference.

Centennial also created a GoFundMe that has raised a little over $20,000 as of Wednesday afternoon.

Melisa Sanders, an architect at local design firm Blackarc, helped develop and design the rendering unveiled at the press conference Wednesday. She said the first step of the project involves gauging the community’s needs based on conversations with residents.

“This is a church, so they have already built-in a community that’s interested in what the design is going to be,” she said. “I don’t see that taking very long.”

But Sanders said the demolition of the church will take weeks or months, and constructing the church alone could take at least a year or more. The other parts of the plan would add to the construction time, not including the cost and difficulty of shipping materials for the project.

Shameem Clark Hubbard, alderwoman of the 10th ward, said she is committed to finding city funds to beautify the eight neighborhoods she serves, all of which suffered damage from the tornado.

Centennial Christian Church vows to rebuild

Shameem Clark Hubbard talks at a press conference on Wednesday, May 28, 2025, unveiling a vision for the new campus of Centennial Christian Church, at 4950 Fountain Ave. in St. Louis, after a tornado destroyed it two weeks prior.

But Centennial, she said, has a special place in her eyes, as the first place she kicked off her campaign in 2023.

“Centennial has been more than a church, it’s been a second home, a safe haven and a source of hope for generations, as I’ve seen it with my own eyes,” she said.

Wise Baker said the new campus reflects the church’s mission “to serve the vulnerable and love without condition.”

The church has served the area for over 100 years — decades before moving into its current building. It provides housing for the elderly, resources for those who lack access to healthcare, and a preschool.

“Today is about more than brick-and-mortar,” Wise Baker said. “It’s about ministry. It’s about the community. It’s about our deep commitment to the people of Fountain Park and north St. Louis.”

A tornado on May 16, 2025 damaged trees and buildings around St. Louis neighborhoods like the Central West End and Fountain Park, as seen on May 17, 2025.

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