116 Best Squarespace Community Website Examples - Page 2
This anti-trafficking nonprofit site pairs a hero image of raised arms with serif typography and a "We are...lovingly equipping brave women on their path to freedom" value statement.
This church site headlines "BUT WE PREACH CHRIST CRUCIFIED FOR BOISE" with mixed serif styling, mint-green accent text, and a gritty urban alley background.
This church site leads with a worship photo and "A Church to Call HOME!" headline, using coral CTAs for RSVP and visit planning.
This church site repeats "Plan a Visit" as its only CTA and anchors the hero with a baptism photograph and "God is up to something new in Las Vegas."
This nonprofit summer enrichment site uses a carousel hero with "EVERY STUDENT DESERVES ACCESS TO AN ENRICHING SUMMER EXPERIENCE" as its singular H1.
This nonprofit site uses a community photo in the hero with officers and residents together, leading with "Building bridges between community and the police."
This church site uses mixed-font collage typography with "JESUS" in cyan brackets centered over a grayscale worship photo.
This church website opens with a dismissible announcement bar and leads with "The best is yet to come," emphasizing the word "best" with an underline.
This church site uses a semi-transparent dark overlay on the hero image and stacks testimonial cards in horizontal scroll to highlight member stories.
This nonprofit housing site leads with a hero image of tiny-home villages and uses a two-column "Who is CVC?" section pairing explanatory copy against stacked container-home photography.
This water access nonprofit site announces "IT'S HERE!" in the hero and tilts project images 2–5 degrees for a casual, scattered-photo aesthetic.
This nonprofit campaign site positions fashion activism with "DRESS UP. DO GOOD." and uses mustard-gold accents paired with organic blob shapes throughout.
This church site opens with an italicized value statement—"You are beloved, you belong, and you are welcome"—then immediately offers dual attendance paths with separate CTAs for online and in-person worship.
This church site leads with "LOVE GOD. LOVE PEOPLE. LOVE LIFE." in all caps, then decorates a small-groups section with hand-drawn black botanical line art on lavender.
This nonprofit site splits its hero into a photograph of children and solid orange field, with "$25 feeds 125 children for a day" as the conversion anchor.
This church site uses a black hero with centered white serif typography and a stark two-tier navigation that splits left/right around a circular cross logo.
This church website leads with a baptism photograph and "Grace Changes Everything" to establish theological positioning before inviting visitors to in-person gatherings or small groups.
This church site opens with a neon cross on a city skyline and leads with "Freedom from the inside out, to the outside in"—positioning faith for the unchurched.
This workforce development site separates employer and nonprofit pathways with opposing pill-button CTAs: "I'M A NONPROFIT" (filled orange) and "I'M A FOR-PROFIT" (outlined orange).
This church website pairs a welcome headline with left-bordered service cards, using teal accents and a "Love Our City" campaign image to signal community engagement.
This church site anchors its hero with an aerial nighttime photograph of Birmingham's skyline and the tagline "Light for the city & beyond."
This nonprofit site pairs teal-and-pink branding with a hero showing intergenerational connection and uses statistics ("Over 60% of seniors in care do not receive visitors") to justify its teen volunteer mission.
This nonprofit site overlays a donation widget on the hero image with toggle between one-time and monthly giving amounts.
This church site leads with "WE'RE STOKED YOU'RE HERE" over a worship crowd photo, using sharp-cornered CTAs and heavy black uppercase typography throughout.
This church website mixes serif and cursive typography in the hero—"Welcome to" script atop "Holland Village Methodist Church" bold serif—with stacked yellow calls-to-action.
This nonprofit housing site leads with a full-width carousel showing shelter structures and a "State of Homelessness: December 2024 Edition" report card.
This nonprofit site leads with "It Makes a Difference" in serif italic, then contrasts a 50% return-to-homelessness stat against its own less-than-1% outcome in side-by-side orange cards.
This church consulting site structures growth pillars as a six-icon grid, alternating between 50% and 25% column widths to emphasize "Outward Facing" and "Strategically Organized" features first.
This church website uses a concert-style hero with stage lighting and splits ministry programs into teal, navy, and coral cards.
This anti-trafficking nonprofit site anchors its hero with a close-up portrait and "Together we can END Human Trafficking," making the cause personal before presenting its three-part mission.