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This 72-year-old Cary church could be your next home

A building in downtown Cary has lived many lives in its 72 years, from church to office and back to church again.

Now, real estate agents are proposing a new role for the structure: single-family home.

“Personally, I think it could be an awesome home,” said real estate broker Daniel Gleason of the Bremer Team, Keller William Success Realty.

The brick building at 204 Spring St. was built in 1951 as the Cary United Methodist Church and then known as the Spring Street Church, according to the Cary Historical Group’s book “Cary Me Back.”

Outfitted with a steeple, the interior retains many church features, including a large room filled with chairs for services.

The property was put on the market in September for $419,000. The 3,789-square-foot building has just one bedroom, but plenty of additional rooms to create whatever the owner would want, Gleason said.

After the Cary United Methodist Church moved to its current First Street location in 1971, the Spring Street building was converted into office space. The building was converted back into a church for the Foundations Baptist Church in 2015. The church put the Spring Street building up for sale when it relocated to the former Cary Evangelical Church on Ada Street earlier this year.

Another unique feature is the basement, which is fully finished with hardwood floors, windows and vaulted ceilings.

“One of my favorite things about the property is the basement,” Gleason said. “It’s got a very cool loft feel to it.”

The entrance is an open concept with high ceilings that could make for a “showstopper” space, with the kitchen and entertainment room flowing together, Gleason said.

“It’s a grand space,” he said. “It would almost be like something you’d see on HGTV.”

The building sits on a 0.4-acre site that includes a parking lot, which could be a place to build a garage if used as a home, Gleason said.

The building is zoned for residential use, Cary Community Development Director Brian Simmons said.

“The village is open to various potential uses,” Simmons said. “We’re waiting for the private sector to find something that would be a good fit for the neighborhood.”

There has been some commercial interest in the property and, depending on the business, it may require rezoning, Gleason said.

“There’s a lot of interest in the property,” he said.

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