When a church begins thinking about expanding its facility, the conversation often starts in a familiar place: What’s the scope? What’s the budget? What’s the timeline? Those are important questions—but they’re not the first questions you should be asking. Because if assumptions about your ministry’s health, growth, or needs are even slightly off, your facility could end up working against your mission instead of supporting it. At Brown Church Development Group (BCDG), we’ve
Your building shouldn’t matter as much as it does—but the reality is, your facility matters more then you think. More often than not, ministry growth slows because a facility can no longer support the ministry happening inside it. When a building starts working against the mission, leaders feel the pressure every week, but may not immediately recognize the cause. If your church feels stuck, stretched, or constantly reacting, your facility may be part of the problem. Here are
We’ve all heard the old saying, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” At face value, the phrase suggests that if something works, you should leave it alone. But in ministry leadership, that mindset can quietly limit the future of a church. Church leaders often find themselves serving as the problem solvers of their organizations. Fair or not, pastors and ministry teams are expected to continually address challenges, prevent issues, and find solutions when problems arise. That re
Buildings are one of the most expensive tools a church will ever own. For many congregations, a building project becomes the single largest financial commitment in their history—shaping debt load for decades, influencing staffing capacity, and affecting ministry flexibility long after the facility opens. It determines how people experience Sunday mornings, how children are checked in and kept safe, how guests are welcomed, and how future growth is either supported or constrai