Eric Hess begins effort to restore and rehabilitate B' Nai Zion Temple
At its zenith, the B'nai Zion Temple in downtown Shreveport served as a herald for the city's thriving Jewish community, complete with majestic Corinthian columns and detailed stonework on the facade. The grand pipe organ was set aglow as the sun cascaded through the beautiful stained glass windows, rumored to have been created by John La Farge, a one-time rival of Tiffany's in the world of stained glass.
It's fitting that an art glass studio has launched a grassroots campaign to save the building, which has fallen into disrepair after years of sitting abandoned.
Sanctuary Arts School and Glass Studio recently completed purchasing the building. Eric Hess, founder of Sanctuary Arts, had dreams for the building long before moving to Shreveport three years ago.
"I am from New Orleans," Hess said. "Saving historic buildings is huge there. I was kind of situated into loving older buildings and architecture and preserving history. I started coming back and forth to Shreveport about 29 years ago. I had an advertising firm in New Orleans. I saw the building, and I saw the Scottish Rite Temple. I thought, 'Why isn't this building being restored?' It's an amazing structure. One of the top three in the city."

Hess said that when he moved to Shreveport, it became evident to him that the temple could be lost without intervention.
"There was nothing being done with it," he said. "It was locked up with the former owner."
Early in his pursuit of the building, Hess found an ally in Wendy Benscoter, executive director of Shreveport Common.
"The historic B'nai Zion building is a city and a state treasure located at the gateway into Shreveport Common and downtown," Benscoter said. "We had front row seats to the ongoing deterioration. Like others before us, Shreveport Common and the city of Shreveport tried to acquire the property from the private owner with no success. It was hard to ignore that vultures had started roosting in the broken windows.
"When we first met Eric, we expected he would face the same obstacles. Even so, we did our best to fulfill our role as the redevelopment arm of Shreveport Common, to unite partners and help remove challenges for redevelopment. Eric has moved forward step by step with passion and tenacity, and an eagerness to do it the right way," Two years of research and work paid off as Sanctuary Arts took ownership.
"Now the process begins to secure building, fix the roof, drain the basement and protect it from further damage," Hess said.
At 802 Common St., the building was built in 1914 and designed by Edward Neild and Clarence Olschner. The Beaux Arts-style temple served as the home for the B'nai Zion congregation until 1956, when it outgrew the space and moved to Southfield Road.
The temple was added to the National Registry of Historic Places in 1994. The application to the registry described the building as "an architectural gem and an ornament to the city."
But time and Mother Nature
have taken a toll on the building. The stonework exterior is crumbling
in places. A family of buzzards is nesting behind the organ, Hess said.
The February snowstorm extended damage to the roof and also compounded
flooding and water damage throughout the temple.
Hess
said it is the windows that are the most important part of the
architecture, even though the origin story that La Forge created them is
up for debate.
"From
my research, I am thinking they were created by Jacoby, a company out of
St. Louis," Hess said. "They did a lot of windows here in Shreveport.
La Farge is what's on the National Register. All of his glass had been
up north. I think he might have been contracted to do handprinted
sections."
Hess said it was fortunate that Sanctuary Glass took ownership of the building before the storm hit.
"With
the recent snowstorm, the weight of that on the corner of the building
caused the roof to separate," Hess said. "We need to raise the roof and
secure the building. Then we can launch a capital campaign to move it
forward and restore the building."
Hess said he has been told the building is not beyond saving.
"Here's
the good news. The bones of the roof are excellent," he said. "Just a
few problem areas. The bones of the building are fabulous, too. We don't
have to remove the glass. There are some caning issues. We can repair
and replace some glass."
Hess is inviting the entire Shreveport community to join the effort to restore the building to its former glory.
Hess
created the "Save the B'nai Zion Temple" Facebook page as a place to
inform the public and recruit volunteers to assist with the efforts.
Among the page's early successes:
• May 26 Facebook post: "Sanctuary
Arts School and Glass Studio is spearheading an effort to save the
Temple. Tomorrow (Thursday) at 1 p.m., the roof of the temple will be
temporarily sealed to eliminate most of the water intrusion that has
caused so much damage. We are lucky that Wendy Benscoter from the
Shreveport Common was able to get Randy Mangrum from Storer Construction
Solutions to get us a lift to bring roofers from Bayou State Roofing up
to the roof to do the repairs. Both companies are doing this for free,
and we are so grateful. Just the first step in saving this building."
• May 27 Facebook post: "Today
was a wonderful day for the Temple. The area of the roof where the
worse damage is was taped, so it will be high and dry for a while as we
prepare to save the building. Thanks to Matt Varnell and Bayou State
Roofing, Wendy Benscoter, Randy Mangrum & Storer Construction
Solutions and Ahern Rentals that loaned us the lift. This is what it is
like when the community comes together for a cause. Stay with us as
Sanctuary Arts School and Glass Studio and our community work to save
this historic gem!"
• June 8 Facebook post: "Cody
Wommack to the rescue. Cody is volunteering to drain the flooded
basement of the B'nai Zion Temple. Thank you so much, Cody!" "It's
really great how community is coming together," Hess said. "We could
never do this alone. It takes a village. It will take a village to save
the building.
"It's
going to take everybody. Not just deep pockets and foundations. It's
like a pie. You need everybody. Need people to give money, even smallest
amounts. You need people who can do in-kind and volunteerism. It's all
of that. And it's all equally important. I don't think it's as
meaningful unless everybody participates."
Hess
said he would unveil more of his plans for the building after the
restoration efforts are more underway. But he said saving the building
is part of the community as a whole.
Benscoter said Shreveport Common will continue to support Hess in his efforts.
"The
B'nai Zion building is an architectural and cultural gem," she said.
"If left to selfdemolish, the hole in our landscape and loss of its
history would be considerable. The first step is to preserve the
building. As for its future, the Shreveport Common Vision Plan calls for
creating places that celebrate the history and culture, add creativity
and spaces for artists, are sustainable and are for the community. We
can now look forward to the hope of that to come for our neighbors and
for our city."
Hess wants all of Shreveport to catch hold of the vision.
"We
want the community as a whole to adopt this and become a part," he
said. "It's really important to me. It's really going to be the city's
building. It is going to be a community center. A sanctuary is a safe
place for all people. It doesn't matter about the -isms. It's going to
be a community center that is going to reach out and provide a
sanctuary."
Sanctuary
Arts School is a 501 (c) (3) Louisiana corporation and operates
exclusively for educational and charitable purposes. Sanctuary Arts
promotes diversity and inclusion and provides ongoing classes in the
glass arts, including glass blowing, kiln casting, sand casting and hot
sculpting.
For more
information on Sanctuary Arts and the effort to save the B'nai Zion
temple, visit sanctuaryartsschool.org or the Save the B'nai Temple
Facebook page.
Storer
Construction Solutions provided a lift for workers to reach the roof.
Cody Wommack volunteered to drain the flooded basements. Roofers are
making repairs for free.