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 plain, very loosely Italianate design of the early 1960s, built to serve the expanding post-war Catholic population... Read More
A mainstream post-war design, distinguished by some artworks and furnishings of a high order. In the seventh century St... Read More
An unusual linear complex of church hall, church and presbytery, the church itself possibly the least architecturally... Read More
An austere German Romanesque-style church by the prolific Frederick Walters, built over a protracted period and later... Read More
A well-crafted and consistently detailed late Gothic-style church by a West Country architect best known for the... Read More
A simple late eighteenth century former Baptist chapel, much altered but nevertheless making a positive contribution to... Read More
A modest design of the 1980s, replacing and incorporating furnishings from the predecessor church of 1896. The most... Read More
Built in Early English Gothic style by the Sheffield architects Hemsoll & Paterson, the church opened in 1901 as... Read More
A post-war dual-purpose suburban church and hall of utilitarian design.Arbourthorne was once a small rural... Read More
An economical stone-built Gothic design of the 1870s and eighties, by local architects of note, with an attached... Read More
A large and well-detailed Italian Romanesque design of the interwar period, well encapsulating the confidence and... Read More
An attractive polygonal design of 2001, with a top-lit sanctuary. It is the successor to a George Goldie church built... Read More