Minnesota Church Center
Welcome to the Minnesota Church Center
Faith communities and faith-based organizations come together at the Minnesota Church Center, the central gathering place of the Minnesota faith community. Through high quality office and meeting/event facilities and access to state-of-the-art technology, the Church Center incubates small non-profits and nurtures the faith community.
Built in 1963, the Church Center is an ecumenical witness owned and operated by the Minnesota Council of Churches. In addition to MCC, the six-story office building houses a variety of tenants, including three regional or statewide denominational offices, many other religious organizations, and nonprofit agencies.
Get Involved
The Church Center’s well-appointed facilities include a wide range of spaces available for rent for a diverse array of needs, including seven meeting/event rooms, a café, indoor courtyard, and expansive lobby seating area.
Tenants and Resources
Collegiality, sharing resources, quality catering, and access to state-of-the-art technology are among the benefits enjoyed by the tenants of the Minnesota Church Center.
Meeting Facilities and Reservation
The Minnesota Church Center’s well-appointed facilities are available to rent for a wide number of event and meeting needs
Our Location
Minnesota Church Center
122 West Franklin Avenue (at Pillsbury)
Minneapolis, MN 55404
Fax 612.870.3622
Building Hours
Monday 8:00 am – 6:00 pm
Tuesday 8:00 am – 6:00 pm
Wednesday 8:00 am – 6:00 pm
Thursday 8:00 am – 6:00 pm
Friday 8:00 am – 6:00 pm
Land Acknowledgment
The Minnesota Council of Churches acknowledges that we are located on the ancestral homeland of the Dakota People. We are in close proximity to the territories of the Anishinabe and Ho-Chunk peoples. This land has been stewarded as a living relative by the Dakota for generations. The United States government effectively stole this land from the Dakota people through a series of unjust treaties and broken promises, followed by targeted efforts of genocide, ethnic cleansing, and forced removal.
The Minnesota Council of Churches, born out of White Protestantism, recognizes our complicity in these matters. The United States government often carried out this injustice in cooperation with institutionalized white churches. The trauma of forced assimilation and the boarding school system is a stain that cannot be washed away. But we can repent of that past and turn towards a more just future.
We look now to the Dakota people and indeed all Native American communities located in the State of Minnesota as examples of resilience, resistance, and strength. We stand resolute in our commitment to oppose any threat to Indigenous culture or tribal sovereignty, be it political, industrial, or religious. We were wrong, we can do better, we will do better.