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 and plain church, converted from a neo-Georgian telephone exchange. Until the nineteenth century Kempston was... Read More
A fine example of pre-ecclesiological Gothic Revival architecture by a locally-renowned architect, making a notable... Read More
A small building built by a member of the Catholic Amherst family and an early work by A. W. Pugin, one of the... Read More
A large red brick town church of the 1990s, a curious hybrid design combining Neo-Romanesque, Scots Baronial and... Read More
A simple prefabricated structure, with one or two furnishings of note. In 1958 Fr Crozier acquired the site of... Read More
A brick Gothic church by F.A. Walters, fairly cheaply built but with a tower of striking design which is a landmark in... Read More
A relatively simple Early English brick church, built on a tight budget for the Oblates of St Charles from designs by... Read More
A Methodist church built in 1899 and acquired for Roman Catholic worship in 1977, the present worship space the... Read More
Built for the Discalced Carmelite Order, this is a late church by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, in a free Gothic style. It... Read More
A post-war church of stripped neo-Gothic design by Adrian Gilbert Scott, built on the site of the bombed former... Read More
A substantial Gothic former Methodist church of the 1860s by the London architect John Tarring, architect of a number... Read More
A striking 1960s design with a high peak roof in a Scandinavian idiom, which with its bell tower has local landmark... Read More