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 functional design of the early 1960s, built to serve a post-war housing estate, which despite its economical... Read More
A modest but attractive Gothic Revival design of 1892, notable externally for its picturesque stone bellcote and... Read More
A functional design of the 1960s, built to serve a post-war housing estate, with some imported furnishings.The... Read More
The primary significance of the building lies in its architectural, historical and townscape interest as a... Read More
A modest stone-built early twentieth century design by A. J. C. Scoles, on land given by the Molesworth family. The... Read More
A large town church built in 1915 by the prolific firm of Scoles and Raymond, in their favoured (and by then decidedly... Read More
The 1984 work at St Joseph’s is a good piece of modern Catholic architecture, intelligently conceived and executed... Read More
Built in 1960 to serve the new town of Newton Aycliffe, the church is an economical, functional product of its time,... Read More
A modern ‘design-and-build’ church, not of heritage significance.The church was built in 1968 to serve an area of... Read More
The church is a good example of a mid-19th century Gothic Revival church by an established... Read More
A late example of the loosely Italian Romanesque style that was popular for Catholic churches in the interwar years,... Read More
An unusual church and presbytery converted in 1947 from a former flannel mill and inn. The project was conceived by... Read More