Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Olga SeguraJuly 20, 2018
Photo by Brandon Morgan on Unsplash

This week, we talk with Gilbert Sunghera, S.J. He is an architectural consultant and associate professor of architecture at the University of Detroit Mercy. Gilbert has worked on projects such as the Jesuit community at Fairfield, the parish of St. Joseph the Worker in Wyoming and the Jesuit high school chapel in Sacramento. We talk with Gilbert about architecture, how he balances his dual passions and what it means to design a sacred space.

Speaking of architecture, America’s new office space—including the studio where Jesuitical is recorded—was profiled in the New York Times this week. You have a look at where we work and read the profile here.

We are on vacation until next month, so no Signs of the Times or Consolations and Desolations this week. However, we still want to hear from you! Come share your consolations and desolations or some interesting Catholics news in our Facebook group. You can also find us on Twitter @jesuiticalshow, support us on Patreon and send us an email at jesuitical@americamedia.org.

More: Jesuits
Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
Bruno Araujo
6 years 4 months ago

Do you ever tried this service https://nerdymates.com/? It has been a holy day when I find it!

The latest from america

“In Hong Kong, we have our wounds that we need to heal,” Cardinal Stephen Chow, S.J., the bishop of Hong Kong, told America’s Vatican correspondent in this exclusive interview.
Gerard O’ConnellDecember 03, 2024
John Banville is surely the only crime novelist in recent memory who has won the Booker Prize and is regularly rumored to be in the running for the Nobel Prize in Literature.
James T. KeaneDecember 03, 2024
“Joe Biden said one thing and did the opposite. A father’s love meant more to the president than keeping his word.”
Kate Scanlon - OSV NewsDecember 03, 2024
The possibility of a “fourth order” of deaconess in the Catholic Church has become part of the conversation around women deacons. But is it the right response?
William T. DitewigDecember 03, 2024