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.
The original church was built in 1905 and is typical of the so-called ‘Ellis boxes’ built under the patronage of... Read More
The original building was a cheap, functional church-cum-hall of 1963 by F.B. Swainston. Thirty years on it was worn... Read More
A small, aisleless stone church built in the 1920s using elements of a design prepared forty-five years earlier by... Read More
A modern complex combining church, hall and presbytery, designed by a local architect who built widely in the diocese... Read More
A small urban church in the Gothic Revival style built on a tight site. It is notable for its elaborate furnishings... Read More
An ambitious scheme for a church with tower was not realised; the church as built is a modest L-shaped adjunct to the... Read More
A small and unassuming church in the grounds of St Augustine’s Priory, owned and maintained by the Sisters of the... Read More
A modest timber portal framed church of the 1960s, the large coloured glass windows of the sides suffusing the interior... Read More
A good example of a late Georgian church, built in 1836 in Greek Revival style. Paid for by the twelfth Duke of... Read More
A major building by A. W. N. Pugin, built towards the end of the architect’s life and completed after his death. The... Read More
An attractive small rural Gothic Revival church of 1911, replacing a Gothick chapel of 1818. The church was built from... Read More
A large plain building, with Gothic detail.A plaque in the building records that church and presbytery were given to... Read More