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 charming, modest Gothic chapel built in the 1870s for Irish agricultural workers. The church was built in 1877 to... Read More
A powerful design of the interwar years by the Italian architect-engineer Giuseppe Rinvolucri, fusing Byzantine and... Read More
A large church of the mid-1960s by Desmond Williams & Associates. The design is functional, with the internal... Read More
An early twentieth century Gothic Revival church designed by its resident priest, with a lofty and now very richly... Read More
A utilitarian structure built for agricultural purposes and converted to a church in the 1960s. St John’s is a... Read More
A large and well detailed church in the Italian Romanesque/basilican style that was so popular for Catholic churches in... Read More
A functional post-Vatican II design, well reordered in 2000, with a painted rood by Stephen Foster. The parish was... Read More
A post-war structure built as a dual-purpose church and hall, later adapted and extended. After the plainness of the... Read More
This modest building is one of a number of dual purpose school-chapels built by C.G. Wray in the 1880s. It has been... Read More
*The church has been closed for Catholic worship and is now a Reformed Baptist church. The photos above and text below... Read More
A substantial Gothic Revival rural church built for the Jesuits by their favoured architect, J. J. Scoles. The church... Read More
A fairly standard design of the late 1950s by L. A. G. Prichard, enlivened externally by an octagonal, mainly glazed... Read More