This was the last of the Holy Brutes in Switzerland we visited. This one is in Chur, Switzerland, designed by architect Walter Maria Förderer and completed between 1966 and 1969. It has the same architectural language of Förderer's other churches (and it's cool that so many communities in Switzerland wanted one of thee babies!). The courtyard is gorgeous as is the delicious combination of concrete and wood. This one seemed to fuse the cement and wood more than the other churches with one growing out of the other at the same time. A few statues connect the space to the past, but the future beckons at every surprising turn, just like life.
2.15.2026
Heiligkreuzkirche (Church of the Holy Cross) in Chur, Switzerland
11.15.2025
the pearly gates are made of concrete: the beautiful brutalism of förderer's church in hérémence, switzerland
The Saint-Nicolas Church by Walter Maria Förderer in Hérémence, Switzerland is peak ecclesiastical concrete. The locale, the scale, the cubism, the detail, and the sheer mass is delightfully daunting and awe inspiring. Built between 1968 and 1971, this ceremony of cement replaced an older church damaged by the 1946 earthquake. This replacement is so solid it could withstand both an earthquake and judgment day.
Built into the hillside, the sanctuary becomes part of the mountain itself. And, in a way, it is, having been built with locally sourced concrete and wood, the latter adding hearthy warmth to the interior and providing the board-forms on the interior and interior. The light grey of the concrete evokes the snow, in the distance when we visited but one with the church in the winter.
The complex of concrete dominates this town of 1,500, but in a serene way. As it so happens, there are 1,500 seats in the church. Gloriously, the church was open for viewing and walking nearly every spot. Perhaps the gates aren't pearly after all; maybe they are made of concrete.