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 small, low-key chapel of the 1960s, the street elevation faced in stone to blend with the university chaplaincy, to... Read More
A fine neoclassical design and city landmark, begun in 1839 for the Irvingites but acquired for Roman Catholic use in... Read More
A notable interwar design in Byzantine style by John Bevan Jr, completed in a contextual manner in the early 1960s.... Read More
A large town church in thirteenth-century Gothic style, built at the start of the twentieth century for the... Read More
A large suburban church built at the time of the Second Vatican Council, on a traditional longitudinal plan but from... Read More
One of the oldest Catholic churches in Bristol, built in large part to cater for Irish refugees from the Great Famine... Read More
A late (1960) traditional basilican design, of high townscape quality and with an atmospheric interior retaining good... Read More
A late Gothic Revival design of the 1920s by the local architect Sir Frank Wills. The design is old-fashioned for its... Read More
A functional church-hall of the 1950s, of no architectural or historical significance but on a large site within a... Read More
A very functional post-war design, not of architectural or historic interest but containing some imported furnishings... Read More
A simple prefabricated building, originally built in the 1950s as a hut for the cadet force of the adjacent Catholic... Read More
A functional brick design of the late 1930s, originally intended to become a school assembly hall. A... Read More