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 timber and steel frame multi-functional building of 1964, pleasantly updated internally at the end of the last... Read More
A well-designed modern church, attractive and welcoming in character, and flexible in use. A significant building in an... Read More
A convincing work by a major Gothic Revival architect of the mid-nineteenth century. Substantial in scale, and... Read More
A small brick post-war church, not of special architectural or historic interest.The church was built in 1951 to... Read More
An ambitious and assured work built for the Jesuits by Henry Clutton, one of the leading Victorian designers of... Read More
A church of engaging character, its striking external form and unified interior lending it a particular quality.The... Read More
A low-cost portal frame building, given some architectural pretension by the box-like facade and tower. One of two... Read More
A modest village church built by a private benefactor in the early twentieth century. It remains largely unaltered, and... Read More
An early example by the post-war practice of local architects L.A.G. Prichard, characterised by high-peaked gables at... Read More
A brick church in modern Romanesque style, by the prolific Catholic architect W.C. Mangan. The first church was... Read More
One of a pair of outstanding early nineteenth century Catholic churches in Wigan. A Jesuit church built in 1819 in a... Read More
One of a pair of outstanding early nineteenth century Catholic churches in Wigan. A secular church built in 1818, its... Read More