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.
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
A church built in three phases: 1931, 1955 and 1992-3. Its primary significance lies in its furnishings and artworks... Read More
A large church in early Christian style, solidly built of vernacular materials. Work started in the 1920s and was... Read More
St Edward’s church is in that strand of longitudinally-planned interwar brick churches of bold forms and massing and... Read More
A classical, Italianate church of the early twentieth century by the architect- priest A. J. C. Scoles, the youngest... Read More
The church building is of no architectural distinction, although it provides a pleasant and light interior. It was... Read More
A plain modern Romanesque design of the interwar years, with Art Deco touches, by Roberts & Willman of Taunton.... Read More
A utilitarian post-war structure, not of special interest. Keyworth lies about six miles southeast of Nottingham city... Read More
A brick church of 1964 by Bingham Towner & Partners, conventional in its planning and design. The campanile has... Read More