On April 4, 1993, Gordon B. Hinckley, then first counselor in the First Presidency, announced during general conference that property was being acquired for a temple in Spain. The site was then identified as being in Madrid on October 9, 1993. The temple complex occupies 3.5 acres in the Pavones neighborhood of Moratalaz (Madrid) at Calle del Templo 2. The multi-building complex includes a
meetinghouse,
family history center, patron and missionary housing, and distribution center. These were completed by early 1999. A public open house was held February 20–March 13, 1999, with approximately 7,000 visitors touring the temple on its first day, including Spanish, Portuguese, and French members. Following the open house, the dedication took place March 19–21, 1999, conducted in ten sessions by Hinckley. The temple was the first in Spain and the
Iberian Peninsula, serving church members throughout Spain,
Portugal, the
Canary Islands, and
southern France. During the
COVID-19 pandemic, temple operations were paused before resuming full worship services in May 2022. == Design and architecture ==