The second chapel, to the right of the main altar, is the "Eucharistic Adoration Chapel", originally named the "Chapel of St. Joseph". The chapel is used for Eucharistic adoration and private prayer.[2] The Holy Eucharist is displayed on the chapel's altar before and after Mass for adoration, prayer, and meditation. The stained-glass window above the altar depicts the Nativity of Christ, similar to the tile painting in the Marian chapel. The eastern wall's window is a stained glass painting depicting the death of Saint Joseph in the arms of his family: Jesus Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary. The smaller window in the chapel depicts Saint Lawrence, to whom the basilica is dedicated. The chapel's altar and part of the apse wall are a mosaic of bits of tile assembled by Rev. Peter Marion and Rev. Patrick Marion, who were priests during the construction of the basilica.
Grounds
The basilica includes a rectory for the priest, a Catholic library, and a gift shop for tourists, which are open after weekend Masses.[4][5] Behind the basilica is a Mary garden, which contains a life sized, white statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Restoration
The National Park Service declared the church a site of "National Significance" in 2010 for its "architectural and engineering distinctions, rather than its religious importance."[6] A report by the church estimated the impact on tourism to be $30 million.[6]
As of 2024, the Asheville Citizen-Times said the historic building had "significant damage to the interior and exterior of the building" and was in urgent need of repair and restoration".[6] The basilica had water leaks, falling masonry due to mortar problems, and a copper dome that had reached its life expectancy. Improved rainwater collection and replacement of the cornice were also needed. The parish raised $3 million and the Basilica Preservation Fund received $1 million more, including $750,000 from the Save America's Treasures program, a grant announced by the NPS on August 20, 2024. An additional $2 million was needed just for the first phase but full restoration was expected to cost $23 million and take 10 years. John G. Waite Associates of New York City was helping with the project.[6]
^Ochsendorf, John (2010). Guastavino Vaulting : The Art of Structural Tile. New York: Princeton Architectural Press. pp. 105–109. ISBN978-1568987415. The church is built in the Spanish Renaissance Style (...) Historian Peter Austin has noted that all floors, ceilings, and stairs are constructed of tile vaulting (…) Guastavino cited as inspiration the seventeenth-century Basilica de los Desamparados in his native city of Valencia, which also contains an elliptical dome on a rectangular plan. The brightly colored exterior tilling on the top of each tower showed a further influence of Valencian architecture on Guastavino's design.