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.
An attractive interwar church in Italian Romanesque style, with some original fittings of good quality. The later... Read More
Built as the sisters’ chapel of La Sagesse Convent, at the heart of a large complex of conventual buildings. It is a... Read More
A late Gothic Revival/Arts and Crafts design by F. R. Bates & Son, with a good and little-altered interior... Read More
An unprepossessing precast concrete building built in 1969 to serve a small Catholic community.A Mass Centre was... Read More
An interwar design of presence and individuality, occupying a prominent position within the model village of New... Read More
A decent and well-lit building, marrying post-War techniques and ideas with traditional materials and making the most... Read More
An economical post-Vatican II design, outwardly unprepossessing but with a striking interior with floating roof... Read More
A large post-war church by Robert A Ronchetti with an impressive, largely brick-faced interior. The church is on a... Read More
Built in the early 1840s by Fr (later Bishop) James Sharples, and a key building in the architectural development of... Read More
A plain brick mission church built to serve a dockland parish and paid for by the widow of the renowned Egyptologist... Read More
A modest brick chapel of the 1920s, one of a large number built in the diocese by the Leicester builder F.J.... Read More
The 1959 church, though modest, was of distinctive design. 1993 alterations have radically altered the appearance, to... Read More