Leysfield Road, London W12
A mid-Victorian Gothic Revival church, originally built for a Presbyterian congregation. On passing to Polish Catholic usage in 1961 it was extended and ‘daringly modernised’ (Cherry), with characteristic fittings of the time. The church makes an important contribution to the local conservation area.
Originally built as St Andrew’s Presbyterian church, from designs by Edmund Woodthorpe, the foundation stone was laid on 30 March 1870. After the Presbyterians moved out, the building lay unused for a long while and its condition deteriorated. It was finally taken over by the Polish Catholic community at a cost of £10,000, repaired, extended and refitted, and reopened for worship on 8 December 1961. The church was re-dedicated to St Andrew Bobola, the seventeenth-century Polish Jesuit martyr.
Description
The church is oriented to the west; directions given in this report are liturgical.
The church is built of ragstone and its form reflects its Nonconformist origins, there being no separate chancel. The body thus consists of a single, wide, five-bay space under a tall slated roof (probably synthetic slates). The east bay has transept-like gables but these ‘transepts’ do not project beyond the line of the side walls and purely serve to emphasise the east end. At the west end there is a four-stage tower, which formed the original main entrance. The detailing of the building is a loose interpretation of thirteenth-century Gothic with pairs of lancets forming the main windows (but triple in the ‘transepts’). The tower has pairs of lancets in its second stage, two-light Geometrical windows in the third stage, and two-pairs of shafted lancets in each face of the top stage: it terminates in tall corner pinnacles. At the east end is a large oculus window. On the south side is an extension of 1961 which provides a porch leading to an aisle with chapels and a baptistery.
The wide interior is dominated by an impressive, heavily timbered hammerbeam roof, with arch-braces below a scissor truss. Over the ‘crossing’ at the east end, the roof timbers form a quadripartite arrangement. Whitened plaster covers the walls. The new aisle is low and is separated from the nave by square piers formed below the lancet windows. At the west end is a gallery which appears to have been refronted and its supports cased in c.1961 (it houses an organ).
Fixtures and fittings. Conversion to Polish Catholic usage brought with it a thoroughgoing refitting in which all the designs are by Klecki. The principal features are:
Architect: Edmund Woodthorpe; Alexsander P. Klecki
Original Date: 1870
Conservation Area: Yes
Listed Grade: Not Listed