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 modest 1950s church, not unattractive and with a devotional atmosphere inside. Helen Gladstone, sister of the... Read More
A good example of a small 1950s church building of some character and distinctive design, by a local architect. The... Read More
Church designed by the Preston-based architect, Wilfrid C. Mangan, who worked extensively in Portsmouth diocese. In... Read More
A mid-Victorian Gothic design, seriously damaged by fire in 2006 and subsequently demolished and replaced with a new... Read More
An Edwardian church in the centre of Isleworth and a landmark at a busy junction. Externally it is a building of mixed... Read More
A mid-nineteenth-century Gothic Revival church, built as the New Church College, the Swedenborgian national seminary... Read More
A neo-Romanesque brick church built in the 1840s from designs by J. J. Scoles. The asymmetrical towers on the main... Read More
A small urban church with a lively domestic-looking frontage and plain side elevation, now opened to view. The church... Read More
A small Early English Gothic church built in 1860-61 by voluntary labour for the largely Irish Catholic population of... Read More
A centrally-planned church from the early 1970s, built to serve a post-war housing estate, with a fan-shaped worship... Read More
A plain post-war church, the internal plan reorientated in the 1990s. The new furnishings are of some quality and... Read More
A large post-war church with a light and lofty interior, reminiscent of a hall church. The sanctuary has been... Read More