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 modest concrete-framed post-war building, built as a dual-purpose church and hall, with a stone front. Sunday Mass... Read More
A functional design on an octagonal plan, serving a modern housing development.The parish of St Patrick, just... Read More
A 1930s brick building in a simplified Gothic style, by Hallwood of Hyde. The interior is a single broad space whose... Read More
A modern ecumenical church in the centre of Nelson, whose ownership is shared by Catholics and Methodists. It is the... Read More
A plain Gothic Revival church, started in 1904-5 and extended to the east about fifty years later, in contrasting... Read More
A plain interwar combined school-chapel, replacing an earlier dual use building on the site. The mission and the church... Read More
A small country church of 1843, designed by A.W.N. Pugin, forming part of an attractive group with attached presbytery,... Read More
A design-and-build church of 1967, of no special architectural or historic interest.The church stands in a large... Read More
A design and build church of a standardised type erected in 1970, of no special architectural or historic... Read More
A design and build church with laminated timber frame, dating from the 1970s and not of special interest.The old... Read More
Netherton has a significant Catholic heritage, but the present church is a fairly functional design of the... Read More
A modest, economical structure originally intended as a hall.The Catholic Mission at Netley is associated with the... Read More