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.
Perhaps the most accomplished of E.W. Pugin’s ‘industrial designs’, built in 1860. Comparable to, but slightly... Read More
A modern church historically associated with, and incorporating fittings from E. W. Pugin’s former church of Our... Read More
A polychrome red and yellow sandstone Decorated Gothic church on a prominent corner site. The best elevation is the... Read More
The main historic church on the northern side of the city, complementing St Patrick’s, Park Place (1821-7) in the... Read More
A church of some significance, with a tower that serves as a landmark in the local area. It is one of a number of works... Read More
One of the major monuments of the Catholic and Gothic Revivals. Designed in a free and inventive Decorated style, with... Read More
One of E.W. Pugin’s ‘industrial designs’, built in 1864-5. While not of the quality of his earlier church of Our... Read More
One of Pugin & Pugin’s more impressive churches, both in external massing and design, and in the quality of the... Read More
An important church which has played a significant role in the spiritual life of Liverpool. It serves as a... Read More
A small church designed by E.W. Pugin, an architect of national standing. Its special importance derives from the... Read More
One of the oldest Catholic churches in Wales, on a site which has seen continuous Catholic worship since the... Read More
A small hipped-roofed building in a vaguely neo-Georgian style, built in 1938 as a telephone exchange and converted to... Read More