Here is a complete listing of the churches of England and Wales that have been assessed under the 'Taking Stock' project.
You can perform and advanced 'Church Search' using the form.
St Michael’s Church is not a building of any great architectural quality. Nonetheless, with its wood-panelled,... Read More
A good example of the work of Peter Paul Pugin, a well-known Catholic church architect, which preserves much of its... Read More
A highly accomplished exercise in historicism, St Oswald’s is the culmination of a series of church designs by J.... Read More
A functional design of the 1970s. The parish was erected in 1959 and the present church built in 1972. It is a... Read More
An early town church by E. W. Pugin in thirteenth century Gothic style, with a wide nave maximising views of the high... Read More
A post-war design consisting of an upper church over a lower hall, the prominent campanile making it something of a... Read More
A modest early twentieth-century chapel serving a small former industrial town.Askam-in-Furness owes its existence to... Read More
The church was built to serve a mining community in 1940. It has an austere external appearance, not enhanced by... Read More
A modest post-Vatican II suburban building, designed using simple materials to create a functional, but attractive... Read More
A stone-built church of 1882, possibly incorporating material from Charles Hansom’s predecessor church of the 1840s.... Read More
Built in 1827, this is an early (pre-Emancipation) but much-altered village church, paid for by the Catholic... Read More
A neat, restrained 1859 essay in red brick Gothic style by C. A. Buckler, terminating internally with a... Read More