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 distinctive and successful design of 1966-8, built to replace an earlier church adjacent (extant and now in... Read More
A late Gothic Revival church built in 1933, to designs by G. B. Cox. The interior has high quality original and later... Read More
A functional church of the 1970s, with an attractive, light-filled interior of laminated timber trusses.The parish... Read More
An economical but well-detailed church of the mid-1960s, designed to meet the emerging liturgical requirements of the... Read More
A utilitarian design of the 1990s, not of architectural or historical significance. A social centre was opened... Read More
A functional building of the early 1960s, built to a traditional plan but using modern forms and materials, catering... Read More
A building of major significance in the diocese, and nationally, illustrating one architect’s response, highly... Read More
A good, fairly late example of the work of the Birmingham architect G. B. Cox, in stripped Romanesque style, its broad... Read More
A simple post-Vatican II church by Brian A. Rush, using modern materials to provide a spacious, flexible interior to... Read More
A former Unitarian chapel of 1802, in Catholic use since 1862, unsympathetically remodelled in the 1970s and again... Read More
A cemetery chapel of 1850 and church and presbytery of 1871-2, by A. W. and E. W. Pugin respectively. The church was... Read More
A stripped Italian Romanesque interwar design by E. Bower Norris, with a strong external design and a carefully... Read More