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.
Built in the 1950s to serve a housing estate, this is a modest design with some typical features of its time. The... Read More
A large church of 1960 by David Brown, serving an area of post-war housing. Typically of its architect, it has a large... Read More
A majestic town church built by A.M. Dunn for the Dominicans, in transitional Romanesque-Gothic style. An intended... Read More
An impressive Byzantine revival building of the interwar period. It was designed by Stienlet & Maxwell, a... Read More
A stone-built Early English Gothic Revival design, originally built in 1847 as a Presbyterian church in New Bridge... Read More
One of Dunn, Hansom & Dunn’s finest compositions, a large structure which once presided over the terraces... Read More
A well-designed building of the post-war years, conventional in plan but with an unusual roof design. It has been... Read More
A striking and innovative design of the early 1970s, near to a medieval ruin and on the edge of a steeply-sided,... Read More
A solid and well-detailed neo-Romanesque design of the 1920s, showing some Byzantine influences, which makes a... Read More
The church was donated by the local landowner, and was commissioned from a distinguished firm of architects who worked... Read More
A plain interwar church built to a standard design used by the architect Richard Byrom elsewhere in the diocese. The... Read More
A modest building built in the late 1950s, largely with volunteer effort, and adapted in 2006-7, with some striking... Read More