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 fine church by J. A. Hansom with minor additions by the same architect and commendably restrained north extensions.... Read More
A small, neat, modern suburban church built in the 1960s as a chapel-of-ease, and designed to serve as a parish hall to... Read More
A pleasing low-key design of the 1950s by R. A. Ronchetti, built to serve an interwar housing estate.During the... Read More
Shefford was the focus of Catholic continuity in Bedfordshire during the eighteenth century, and a chapel was built... Read More
A modestly-sized steel-framed and brick building of the 1930s, originally planned to serve as a hall for a church which... Read More
A design and build church of 1976, not of special architectural or historical interest.Shenley was created as a... Read More
A red-brick Edwardian suburban church in the Gothic style of around 1300. It is well-proportioned and has a good,... Read More
A mid-1960s brick church for a suburban area, with a laminated timber portal frame and on a conventional longitudinal... Read More
A large Gothic Revival church of 1863-4 by E. W. Pugin. The benefactors were Major Henry Mostyn and his wife Elizabeth.... Read More
A very late Gothic Revival church, designed by Allan Reid of Young & Reid and typical of the best interwar... Read More
A modern steel-framed church with attached contemporary presbytery, built in a corner of Langhorne Park, site of a... Read More
A good late Victorian church, if somewhat stylistically old-fashioned. It presents a fine composition to the street.... Read More