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 conventional post-war church erected shortly after the Second Vatican Council. The church has been reordered... Read More
A plain interwar church with Romanesque details which has been extended and reordered over the years.The Catholic... Read More
A large and distinguished urban Gothic Revival church, despite the unfinished bell tower. The church contains stained... Read More
A plain inter-war church which was extended and re-orientated in 1982. It contains several pieces of sculpture by... Read More
A modern church notable for its sculptural volume, built at the time of the Second Vatican Council. Major alterations... Read More
An early twentieth-century neo-Romanesque church serving the Tyne Dock area, built by the Hull practice of Brodrick,... Read More
The original modest early twentieth century church was built to cater for the working population of Wigston, an... Read More
A post-Vatican II church on an octagon-within-a-square-plan. The most significant furnishing is the statue of St Anne... Read More
A late 1960s urban church which displays an interesting marriage of traditional planning with a sanctuary-focused... Read More
A pleasant small Italo-Byzantine church of the mid-1920s which was built to serve both the parish and the adjoining... Read More
W.C. Mangan’s last church in the diocese, with a moderne Gothic character rather than the basilican style he favoured... Read More
A distinctive design and one of the more significant churches of the post-war rebuilding of Southampton. The bell tower... Read More