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 lofty, impressive and relatively unaltered urban church of the 1860s by E. W. Pugin, following on from his work on... Read More
One of the so-called ‘Ellis boxes’, a group of economically-built churches put up in the diocese in the first... Read More
A small church of the early 1970s, of pyramidal construction and roof form, and with a warm, timber-clad... Read More
A large and internally impressive church in a modern interpretation of Gothic, with glass by Joseph Nuttgens. The... Read More
A small modern church on a centralised plan built in 1970 to the designs of Patrick White, partly to serve a new... Read More
Built in 1847 at a time of major Irish immigration to the dockyard in the wake of the Great Famine, St Mary’s is one... Read More
A very modest chapel and hall, of no particular architectural or historic interest but located in a conservation... Read More
A fine early twentieth century Romanesque design by F. A. Walters, forming a good group with his presbytery. The... Read More
A modest interwar building in traditional style. Pendlebury is situated to the north of Swinton, both now part... Read More
An economical, prefabricated design with a laminated timber roof structure, one of many such designs built by the firm... Read More
An accretive building of limited architectural interest, originally a simple 1920s mission hall, now with enlargements... Read More
A neat mid-nineteenth century Puginian Gothic town church, built at the expense of Fr George Haydock of Cottam and... Read More