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 bold and impressive design of the 1950s, blending Modern Perpendicular Gothic, Scandinavian and Art Deco elements.... Read More
A simple and well-built design of the late 1950s, serving a modern housing estate. The campanile is a local... Read More
A confident Gothic design of the 1880s by the Pugin firm, intended as the chapel for an enclosed religious order. Apart... Read More
A church built in the early 1960s to serve a post-war housing estate. Although not of special architectural interest,... Read More
An important building from the early days of the revival of Catholic church building in the West Midlands. It is a... Read More
A post-Vatican II urban church with a strong design, clearly influenced by Spence’s cathedral at Coventry, but... Read More
A traditionally-planned brick church of 1959-60, built to serve a housing estate. It has simple, elegant lines and its... Read More
A fourteenth century wayside chapel for pilgrims to the major medieval shrine of Our Lady at Walsingham, rescued from... Read More
A modern design by Anthony Rossi, opened in 2006 and designed to be carbon neutral. The round tower and attractive... Read More
A large modern building in the form of a traditional hipped-roofed barn, built in 1982-3 to complement the services in... Read More
A utilitarian design, built in the 1970s as a Methodist church.The first church in Sewardstone Road opened in 1951,... Read More
An imposing design of 1931, and one of the best of T. H. B. Scott’s many churches in the diocese, placed in a... Read More