This temple dedicated to Our Lady of Carmen was inaugurated on June 23, 2001, replacing the one that had begun to be built and that had to do a comprehensive rethinking of what the previous construction was going to be.
The aesthetics of this church is based on the new conception of the liturgy marked by the Second Vatican Council: creating an aesthetic that brings men and women closer to the Faith using an architecture where the beauty of the signs is directly related to the beauty of the Faith and Love of God towards all men.
This temple collects all the liturgical signs of the reform of the Second Vatican Council: the President or Priest in its headquarters would be the head of Christ, the ambo from where the word of God is proclaimed represents the mouth, the altar where the Eucharist is performed is the heart of Jesus and the surrounding assembly would be the members of the body of Christ. In front of the altar, on the ground, is the large baptismal font in the shape of a Cross like the first baptisteries. The font represents the birth to a new life, since through baptism we are born to a new life in Christ. The baptismal font is framed by the four evangelists.
The plant of the church is central and arranges the assembly in a circular way, to signify that those who meet there are the same people, that together they are part of the same body of Christ and of the Church. The entire room is decorated with a blue carpet that is a symbol of the sea or water. Water in Scripture many times symbolizes death, so it can be said that Christians walk on water, that is, on death; because God saves us from it. Inside the walls of this temple are made with a rough material, which represents the maternal uterus; because the Church is our mother and gestates within her the new children of God.
The mural that presides over this temple is that of Mary and the apostles at Pentecost, when the Holy Spirit is delivered to them. To the right of the main altar is the image of Our Lady of Carmen and to the left the Tabernacle, conceived as a tabernacle where the Eucharistic Reserve and the Word are located. The church is decorated by modern windows that represent three biblical themes: The coming of the Holy Spirit at the door, the Creation on one side and the Crucifixion on the other.