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 Gothic Revival design of the turn of the twentieth century, built for Anglican worship and acquired for Roman... Read More
A modern church adjoining and replacing a neo-Norman church of the 1840s. The new church has good dalle de verre glass... Read More
A simple functional building of the 1950s.The church was opened in 1953 and served from Weaverham, where a new church... Read More
Post-war church, not (on the basis of external inspection) of architectural or historic interest.A church was... Read More
A red brick interwar church in neo-Basilican/Byzantine style, of some quality.Expansion of the ironworks... Read More
Post-war red brick church, with a raised 'bell cote' incorporating a Celtic cross.Extensive terraced housing for... Read More
Built to the designs of E. W. Pugin and the first and the finest Catholic church in Barrow, a planned... Read More
A plain Gothic design, old-fashioned for its date. The significance lies more in the location, at the heart of the... Read More
A small church built in 1955 to serve a post-war housing estate.Small red brick building with slate roof. The blind... Read More
A former school-chapel designed by the mission priest and built in 1897. The plain Gothic building occupies a dramatic... Read More
A plain stone-fronted Gothic church of the early twentieth century, built to cater for the largely Irish Catholic... Read More
A traditional longitudinal-planned church of the early 1960s, much altered in 2000. The attached parish hall is... Read More