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 large interwar Gothic church, built alongside the presbytery and school-chapel of 1896. It belongs to the partnership... Read More
F. X. Velarde is a significant twentieth-century church architect and St Aloysius is an assured design in his... Read More
A simple post-war church with an Italianate tower, concrete frame and red brick facings. The building is well-sited on... Read More
The church was economically built in the mid-1950s and is typical of that period in the use of tall portal frames for... Read More
A simple early twentieth century structure originally built as a cinema and adapted as a church in the early... Read More
A substantial town centre landmark church of Byzantine design, strongly influenced by Bentley’s Westminster... Read More
A striking and effective design from the early 1960s by Desmond Williams & Associates. The robust interior is... Read More
A clear functional design of the 1970s, designed to place all the internal focus on the top-lit altar, which beneath... Read More
A late Romanesque revival church of 1953-4 by H. S. Goodhart-Rendel. The building is relatively plain for its date,... Read More
The church is a functional and economical octagonal design of the 1970s. It lies behind the presbytery, a listed timber... Read More
A large Gothic Revival church of 1878-81, the first of many in the diocese by F. A. Walters, here apparently working in... Read More
A Puginian Gothic church of 1856 by Daniel Cubitt Nichols. The church was built under the patronage of William, twelfth... Read More