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, robust medium-sized church built to serve an interwar suburban estate. Its blocky Romanesque design is similar... Read More
A good example of a medium-size post-war estate church, one of the stronger designs by the prolific architects Reynolds... Read More
A building of relatively simple yet monumental design recalling Art Deco-inspired architecture of the interwar years.... Read More
St Mary’s was designed by Pugin & Pugin and exhibits an obvious debt to the architecture of E. W. Pugin. The... Read More
A small suburban dual-purpose church and parish hall built to serve post-war estates, of no architectural or heritage... Read More
A late nineteenth century design by Herbert Tijou, transformed by a fairly imaginative remodelling by Reynolds &... Read More
A striking Edwardian town church by the Liverpool architect Edmund Kirby. The bold red brick and terracotta exterior is... Read More
Built shortly after World War II and despite an evidently modest budget, displaying an enterprising plan and handling... Read More
One of the better post-war churches designed by the prolific architect Thomas Crawford, with a confident west front... Read More
An interwar church built on the site of the stables and coach house of Ragworth Hall, in a simple revival style which... Read More
A large, accretive Gothic Revival church, ranging in date from 1841 to 1909. Its most significant phase is the first,... Read More
A typical post-Vatican II church built to serve a large housing estate, altered in the 1990s. It was economically... Read More