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.
The oldest freestanding church still in use in the Diocese of East Anglia, built three years before Catholic... Read More
A modest town centre church of the mid-nineteenth century, by a local architect, which has retained much of its... Read More
A box-like post-Vatican II design, internally planned on the diagonal and with a striking window behind the... Read More
Architecturally old-fashioned for its date, the church acts as something of a local landmark. Externally the transverse... Read More
A modern design of 1962-4, incorporating later slab glass made at Prinknash Abbey. The church has been extended. It... Read More
A long, low plain brick Gothic design, with some domestic Tudor detailing, built with the adjoining presbytery from... Read More
An octagonal design by Weightman & Bullen, of some interest as an early exercise in centralised liturgical... Read More
A modest portal framed church of the late 1960s, replacing a former Masonic Hall which had been acquired in 1903. The... Read More
While not of the same townscape or design quality as Pugin and Pugin’s later church at Ansdell, the church and... Read More
Post-Vatican II structure, not of special architectural or historical interest.Nicholas Owen, known also as ‘Little... Read More
A modest chapel built in the 1920s in connection with the adjacent former convent.The church was built as the chapel... Read More
A striking design, the high-pitched roof form a type popular for smaller churches in the mid-1960s. The church is... Read More