Look ahead at the striking modern building with scalloped concrete walls and dramatic stained-glass windows, just to the left of the “Temple Beth Zion” sign.
Temple Beth Zion isn’t just any building-it’s a bold marvel of modern design, shaped like a scalloped oval with 10 massive curving walls, each one representing a Commandment. Designed by Max Abramovitz, the structure looks as if it’s reaching up toward the sky, and when you stand here, you might feel tiny next to its soaring 45-foot walls-don’t worry, no giants are attending services inside! Peek through those spectacular stained-glass windows, the handiwork of artist Ben Shahn, who also designed the menorah and those epic 30-foot-high commandment tablets at the entrance. Now, imagine stepping inside as a warm beam of colored light washes over you from the giant windows--and the sound of the synagogue’s huge 4,000-pipe organ fills the space, shaking the very floor beneath your feet.
If these walls could talk, they’d tell stories from 1850, when the congregation was founded, right through a dramatic fire in 1961 that destroyed their previous Byzantine-style temple, with its copper dome shining in the Buffalo sun. And while you’re here, don’t miss the adjacent Judaic museum, where a rotating cast of treasures brings the congregation’s history to life. Today, Temple Beth Zion stands not just as Western New York’s largest Jewish congregation, but as a living symbol of renewal, resilience, and the power of community.




