

The cathedral has been play tested and all areas are accessible (so far as I know).

#Sims 4 residential lots windenburg free
At the back of a cathedral the ground opens up into the basement and catacombs below which are free to be explored by visitors. With two transept chapels dedicated to a Jacoban priest and a Peteran priestess, and a nave to peacefully pray to your god there is enough place for the whole town of Windenburg to fit inside the cathedral. The interior is as simple as the exterior. Maybe the new owner will finally let people come close to the strange well. The late owner of the cathedral had the gate locked for visitors, but nobody really knows why. However, among the bushes and many many flowers an overgrown gate can be seen, with a well behind it. There is a gazebo for a private meeting, a graveyard, a little communal sitting area, and two ponds where you can freely fish. The cathedral is surrounded by multiple ancient trees and lots, and I say lots of vegation. The late owner decided to have it replaced with a simplified, glass variant since there was no budget to recreate the original heavy wooden door.

Recently some awful vandalists destroyed the cathedral's original, gorgeous front door. As such the church no longer displays the Peteran flags and sigils, but instead boasts a colourful butterfly to symbolise Windenburg's freedom of faith. Sims of the Jacoban faith and all other religions can now also come here to pray in peace. Officially named the Windenburg Catheral of the Peteran Belief, the faiths practiced here have long since diverted from purely the Peteran belief. Over the course of hundreds of years this small hut transformed into a majestic, yet simplistic cathedral. It was naught but a simple hut where a Peteran priest converted local sims to the Peteran faith, bestowing The Watcher's blessing upon them.

The first parts of this beautiful building were established back during the Simlish Dark Ages. She specifically built her home on a nearby hill to be able to see the cathedral from her windows. Its clocktowers can be seen from all corners of Windenburg, much alike Lady Erline Von Vuur's estate, which she lovingly named the Hall of Flames. During the high of Windenburg's development a few of the founding families got together to build this beautiful place of faith.These patrons, Jacob Bearson, Erline Von Vuur, Bonnie Vischer, and Alain Borde, used their fortunes combined to build this masterpiece.
