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 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
A red-brick church of the 1850s in a Gothic Revival style drawing upon motifs of c.1300. It is architecturally plain,... Read More
A large, buff-brick church built to serve a post-war housing estate on the western outskirts of Kidderminster. Although... Read More
A plain post-war church built by the Wakefield firm Lanner Ltd using their characteristic laminated timber arches. The... Read More
An attractive small late nineteenth-century brick church in Perpendicular Gothic style, by a local architect of... Read More