eccu

2011

 


 

Executive Pastor
Austin, TX

 

Executive Pastor
Tennessee

 

Executive
Pastor
Bellevue, WA

 

 

 

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History of Port City Community Church

 

port city

Port City Community Church held its first service on October 24, 1999 in a rented auditorium at a middle school in Wilmington, NC. However, the first service was not the actual beginning, Mike Ashcraft and his brother-in-law Chris Kuhne had both been in conversations about starting a church for years. Both of them were youth pastors with a passion for helping people walk with God. During the summers they would put on summer camps at Ormond Beach, Florida. These camps would serve as a way for God to shape them and the church He would have them build.
Back to the first service… the two started with a handful of volunteers and participants (29 to be exact). They rented a middle school auditorium and used minivans to haul gear week to week. The first service had 84 people in attendance and a commitment to do it again.

port cityFast-forward to 2001, attendance had grown to 242; the gear to pull off a service was being hauled in a new donated 16’ trailer; a birth to pre-k ministry was meeting in the cafeteria of the middle school; the gymnasium was holding the elementary age ministry and a rented office space provided workspace for the 4 person staff and the volunteer youth ministry. The budget for the year was $180,859.00, this allowed for the hopeful new hires to help with small groups, media, and family ministries.

From 2001 to 2005 the staff would grow from 3 to 13 because of this, the church would move to a new office facility for more room and the budget would increase from $180,859.00 to $2,000,801.00 annually. Attendance swelled to over 1900. During this time Port City would add 2 more Sunday morning services, stop a midweek service to keep focused, and add another 16 foot trailer and a 16ft box truck to carry all the gear.

port cityValuable lessons would be learned by the board of directors and senior staff at Port City as the school reached capacity and service times were maxed out. Port City had been in the process of looking for space options in the community. A 113 acre site was explored but when it was learned that a million dollar sewer project would have to be completed to use the property the church moved on. The church then began looking at a facility in an industrial park in the north part of town. Port City would invest hundreds of thousands of dollars to the project only to have the deal fall apart in the eleventh hour. Through patience and God’s provision a piece of property was found located in the geographic center of the Wilmington area. A group of investors from the church purchased and gave the church the option to buy.

port cityThe church would hire CCL and associates out of Atlanta, GA to help with planning and development of the facilities to be constructed on the piece of property. Plans would be finalized on a 90,000+ sq. ft facility with two theaters for children, a main auditorium that would seat 1750, office space for about 60 employees, birth to pre-k area, and a café and bookstore.
CCL would also serve as project managers of the project freeing up the staff to continue to do ministry. CCL would be the first part of a three part team that God would assemble to help Port City realize the new building. The next part of the team would be ECCU out of Brea, CA who would secure the financing of the project. Edifice from Charlotte, NC was/is the general contractor that would use its religious facilities division to bring the project in on time and on budget.

port cityWith capacity hindering the church’s ability to reach its mission 2006 and 2007 would prove to be a very challenging time for the staff and leadership at Port City. The 2006 attendance grew to 2200 and the budget for 2006 would be 3.7 million. The church began to look at options to solve the capacity issues.

The church decided to add another location to bridge the gap until the construction could be completed. Port City would rent 4 theaters each week for two services, three theaters for children’s ministries and one for adults.  The service would be a video teach from the main location from the week previous with a live worship band. We would hold two services and have full family ministries. These were lessons we had learned before, we needed to have places for people to serve and the ability to serve one service and attend one service. The second location would run 18 months up to the opening of the new facility. During this time the attendance at this location would grow from 275 to 600 and the overall attendance would grow to 3200.

2008 the staff would prepare to move in the budget for the year would grow to 4.4 million and the attendance would stabilize at 3200 as capacity was reached at both locations.

The first services at the new facility on 250 Vision Drive were on July 20, 2008.  The service times remained at 8:30am, 10:30am and 12:30pm on Sundays.

In the new facility average attendance has increased by about 1200 people since the move to Vision Drive! The average attendance for the first 7 weeks at Vision Drive is 4692 (including adults and children).  Our 10:30am service is at full capacity and there is room to grow at the 8:30am and 12:30pm services.

The Evangelical Christian Credit Union (ECCU provided the funding for the CCL's loan) and CCL remain a part of the relationship with Port City as we look to the future and plan to try to keep pace with what God is doing at Port City Community Church. Phase two is currently being looked with the help of land financing with ECCU and strategic planning with CCL.

I believe Port City Community Church is an example of a great team assembled to do God’s work with everyone submitting to trying to make the vision of Port City a reality. This team took a kingdom perspective and looked for creative ways to make financing and construction work.

port city