New parish church Feldkirch-Tisis
The Roman Catholic parish church Feldkirch-Tisis is located in the Tisis district of the municipality of Feldkirch in the Feldkirch district in Vorarlberg . It is consecrated to the Holy Family and belongs to the Feldkirch deanery in the Feldkirch diocese . The building is under monument protection ( list entry ).
history
The church was built between 1956 and 1959 according to plans by Norbert Ender and Franz Magloth and consecrated in 1959.
architecture
- Church exterior
The church is a hall building with a protruding roof. On the north side the roof is supported by wooden supports. From the east wall are niche arcades with a war memorial. The church tower in the northwest has an open belfry. To the south, the sacristy and the rectory , built in 1975, adjoin the church.
- Church interior
The hall room has a flat ceiling. There are window slits on the south wall. The altar wall is pulled forward, the gallery straight. The glass paintings are by Martin Häusle and were executed by Rudolf Marte in 1959 . In the chancel the community of saints is represented with their respective names. On the left wall of the nave, the Way of the Cross is shown in 22 glass windows in double rows. Behind the gallery is the baptistery with concrete glass windows.
Furnishing
The lamb of God is depicted on the popular altar with incised drawings . The four evangelists are shown as incised drawings on the ambo. Figures are also carved on the baptismal font. On the left side altar is a figure of St. Michael from the middle of the 18th century. A crucifix from the first half of the 18th century hangs on the right choir wall .
organ
The organ was made by Hubert Neumann and Edmund Hohn in 1964.
literature
- DEHIO manual. The art monuments of Austria : Vorarlberg. Feldkirch. Parish Church Tisis Bundesdenkmalamt (Ed.), Verlag Anton Schroll & Co, Vienna 2011, ISBN 978-3-85028-397-7 , p. 190
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Vorarlberg - immovable and archaeological monuments under monument protection. ( Memento from May 28, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) . Federal Monuments Office , as of June 26, 2015 (PDF).
Coordinates: 47 ° 13 ′ 32.7 ″ N , 9 ° 34 ′ 53.4 ″ E