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 modest brick church built to serve a new housing estate. Its principal interest lies in its resemblance to military... Read More
A mid-Victorian, brick Gothic Revival church by Willson & Nicholl, built for a mainly Irish congregation. The... Read More
A functional modern church, typical of its late 1950s date. Reordering has deprived the interior of some of its... Read More
A late Victorian church executed to a high standard from designs by John A. Crawley and mostly completed by F.A.... Read More
A curiosity that continues to tell its unusual history through the unaltered front and the opened out interior. The... Read More
A late 1980s church of distinctive architectural design, by a noted local architect.From 1947 Mass was celebrated in... Read More
Built in 1897, and the earliest of Edmund Kirby’s series of small-scale Catholic churches built to a limited budget,... Read More
A church typical of many built in the interwar period to serve new housing estates, in an austere Romanesque style. The... Read More
A characteristic but architecturally unexceptional 1970s church, set within the former grounds of a listed... Read More
A modern dual-purpose church and hall. The ecclesiastical function is only expressed externally by two cross finials... Read More
A typical church by Lanner Ltd. of Wakefield, who specialised in straightforward churches with prefabricated... Read More
A church of polygonal plan, dating from the time of the convening of the Second Vatican Council, and reflecting the... Read More