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.
A small post-war chapel of ease, of fairly functional design. From 1942, Mass was said at Ilminster in the Red... Read More
A modern, utilitarian design which appears to have been designed as a parish hall. Immingham is of medieval origin,... Read More
A modest early twentieth-century red brick Gothic church by Matthew Honan. *NB church closed in 2017* The mission was... Read More
An estate church in Quattrocento Italianate style by J. J. Scoles, built for the Blundell family and linked to the... Read More
A 1930s neo-Tudor brick church, its design reflecting that of nearby Ingatestone Hall, the chapel of which served the... Read More
A utilitarian dual-purpose church built from designs by Eric Sandon in Festival of Britain year to serve an interwar... Read More
Built in the late 1950s to serve a large post-war housing estate, St Marks is an A-framed church of distinctive design... Read More
The site of the oldest post-Reformation place of Catholic worship in Ipswich, developed from a small chapel of 1827... Read More
A modest church of the 1950s, not adventurous in its design but well detailed, and notable for some good dalle de... Read More
A stately town centre church of 1860, designed by George Goldie in the polychromatic Gothic style being promoted at... Read More
A utilitarian structure of the 1960s, built as a dual-purpose church and parish hall. Irlam was an undeveloped area... Read More
A church of some architectural character built through the patronage of the de Trafford family. It is little altered... Read More