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 large functional building of the 1970s, by a well-known firm but not not of special architectural or historic... Read More
A functional post-Vatican II design. The church was built in 1972, serving the southwestern suburbs of Wigan. It is... Read More
A modest building built of local stone in a low-key but dignified Norman style. An extension has been carefully... Read More
A curious architectural hybrid: a small Gothic Revival design of the early 1850s by William Wardell, with a block-like... Read More
A former Anglican church of the 1840s in lancet Gothic style, built as a chapel of ease to the medieval parish church.... Read More
A simple interwar design, one of several architectural collaborations between Bishop Thomas Shine and F. Spink, builder... Read More
A stone-built late nineteenth-century dual-purpose church and school with presbytery, forming a group of some historic... Read More
A plain brick 1970s design in a suburban location, distinguished by its raised tower over the sanctuary.The mission... Read More
A modest, steel-framed church built after the Second Vatican Council, within the Wiveliscombe Conservation... Read More
The church is a modern prefabricated structure, of no architectural or historical significance. However, the site is of... Read More
A brick-built Gothic church, one of many such built in the diocese in the 1950s and early 60s by J. S. Comper. The... Read More
This is a church of some quality that remains largely as built. The materials with which it is constructed have been... Read More