Saint Magdalen de Pazzi Church is constructed on the site of the existing rectory and parish center, atop a hill within a residential neighborhood. Mine Street forms the southern boundary of the site and provides a connection with downtown Flemington. A massive stone wall along the property edge flanking Mine Street is the gateway to the site. A great lawn slopes up from the stone wall, creating a grand foreground to the buildings.
Situated as the third element in a crescent configuration with the rectory and parish center, the new church completes the parish complex.
The church is set into the existing slope to establish a lower level entry at grade and an outdoor plaza
overlooking the great lawn at church level. A new oval drive provides a formal arrival and departure
element, and a link to the enlarged north parking area.
The church program is comprised of a narthex (indoor gathering area), worship space seating 680, a daily
chapel, offices, and a lower level for future classrooms and offices. The building is a study in masonry of
forms and elements fundamental to Christian architectural tradition, developed within contemporary
guidelines for Catholic worship. The primary spaces are expressed as independent forms in the building
mass. The interior materials include an exposed glu-laminated wood structure supported by brick piers,
porcelain tile flooring, and red oak woodwork throughout.