Announcement The temple was announced by Gordon B. Hinckley, then a counselor in the First Presidency, in general conference on October 3, 1992. The location, on land in American Fork previously used as a church welfare farm, was announced at the following conference six months later. The temple overlooks the cities of American Fork,
Pleasant Grove,
Cedar Hills,
Highland and
Alpine as well as nearby
Utah Lake.
Mount Timpanogos, the peak from which the temple gets its name, and the
Wasatch Mountains serve as a backdrop. Ground was broken for the temple a year after its announcement. Approximately 12,000 people gathered on the site for the ceremony. During the services, the location of the
Madrid Spain Temple was announced.
Dedication The temple was dedicated on October 13, 1996 by Hinckley, who by then was the
church's president. The dedication sessions were held over an entire week, with three on Sunday and four on each of the following days, for a total of 27. Before the dedication, Hinckley and his counselors in the First Presidency,
Thomas S. Monson and
James E. Faust, applied mortar to the temple's cornerstone. They were followed by
Boyd K. Packer,
Acting President of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles;
W. Eugene Hansen of the
Seventy and executive director of the church's Temple Department;
Robert J. Matthews,
temple president;
Stephen M. Studdert, vice chairman of the temple committee; and Hinckley's wife, Marjorie. About 11,615 people participated in the first dedicatory session, with about 2,900 of them in the temple. The others attended via broadcast in the
American Fork Tabernacle, 12
stake centers in Utah and
Wasatch counties, and the
Salt Lake Tabernacle on
Temple Square in
Salt Lake City. The First Presidency and Packer spoke in the first session and were accompanied by their wives. About 38,000 attended the three sessions on the first day. During the week, Hinckley presided over and spoke in 11 dedicatory sessions, including the cornerstone ceremony. Monson and Faust each presided over eight dedicatory sessions, and each spoke in 11 sessions, which included the cornerstone ceremony. A total of 52
general authorities addressed the sessions, as well as the
temple presidency and matron. == Design and architecture ==