116 Best Squarespace Community Website Examples - Page 4
This church site layers serif display type and script subheadings over full-bleed worship photography, with location CTAs rendered as frosted-glass pill buttons.
This disability support services site pairs a joyful wheelchair user photo with "everything" underlined in orange to emphasize ease-of-use messaging.
This cleantech accelerator site highlights "market ready" in lime-green marker effect and organizes value through numbered pillars: "Catalyzing change," "Generating growth," "Scaling solutions."
This Christian discipleship resource site organizes life topics in a 3×3 grid of alternating solid-color and photo cards with questions like "CAN I EVER TRUST ANYONE AGAIN?"
This youth services nonprofit anchors its mission statement in serif italics and measures impact through a gold-circled "7,000+" stat.
This civic alliance site uses a saturated yellow background with mixed-media collage featuring cutout portraits and organic blob shapes, headline "Business together makes Portland better."
This nonprofit site uses script headings and gold geometric accents to present trafficking survivor support as "a transformative journey" rather than crisis intervention.
This animal rescue nonprofit uses cutout dog portraits flanking the adoptable dogs section and pairs serif headlines with pill-shaped purple buttons throughout.
This creative community site leads with "Everyone is creative" in large italic serif and sells scale through a single statistic: "245 cities across 70 countries, for free."
This creator-monetization site uses staggered profile card grids with hot pink and neon yellow accent blocks, and positions "$1 million each month" as linked text.
This social commerce platform sells exclusive access through cause participation, using painterly botanical illustrations and circular badge iconography to structure "LIMITED DROPS" versus "ALWAYS ON" pathways.
This church site sells its identity through merchandise—a "Collegiate Drop" sweatshirt gets equal visual weight as the latest sermon.
This medical association site announces its name in a full-width orange banner with "Hunter" in 80px condensed sans-serif, then overlays its ECG-line logo on a coastal photograph.
This nonprofit urban design site pairs a mission statement about "unjust systems" with serif typography and a burnt-orange navigation bar anchoring community photographs.
This nonprofit education site leads with "Building a pathway to *purpose.*" and embeds a classroom video alongside statistics about post-graduation uncertainty.
This cat cafe site uses coral announcement bars and bold underlines on "people" and "rescue cats" to emphasize its adoption mission.
This nonprofit site leads with a bold serif mission statement and uses orange-red pill buttons for every call-to-action across navigation, events, and volunteer recruitment.
This megachurch site uses a bento-grid card layout mixing lifestyle photography, solid blacks, and rounded corners to promote Sunday services and community groups.
This church website leads with a baptism photograph overlaid with serif typography and a stark white bordered CTA button reading "Worship With Us Online."
This church site uses a dismissible announcement banner and stacks its welcome section in two columns: a 20-year anniversary seal beside copy that frames attendance as "discover a new hope."
This neurodiversity training site frames modular expertise through hexagonal image clusters and decorative underlines on key words like "modular."
This neighborhood association site uses a forest green announcement bar and orange hero with serif typography to establish local identity around "the Neighborhood with HEART."
This adoption services site uses pregnancy test imagery in the hero and overlays service cards with purple gradients and white text.
This outdoor recreation site uses a vintage badge logo and splits "CREATING GREAT ADVENTURES *since* 1975" across serif and script fonts in the hero.
This Cape Town church site mixes handwritten script labels with bold serif display type and uses a torn-paper mountain divider to separate service times from growth messaging.
This nonprofit advocacy site leads with "We are America's climbing advocates" over dark backgrounds and uses dark green labels to accent mission statements.