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.
Even in its incomplete state, this major town church by J. F. Bentley is an impressive structure. The church takes full... Read More
A small rural church in an attractive landscaped setting, built in Gothic Revival style in the 1890s to serve the... Read More
A remarkable church by Giles Gilbert Scott, designed in 1929 but not completed until 1963. The architectural forms and... Read More
A small chapel of considerable historic interest. Originally built as a chapel for a Benedictine community around the... Read More
A simple, nicely-detailed example of the round-arched style which flourished in the first half of the twentieth... Read More
A much-altered Italianate church of 1898-9 by the little-known architect Young Bolton. The richly decorative high altar... Read More
A large church, square on plan, built for a new residential area shortly after the Second Vatican Council, and... Read More
Designed by Reynolds & Scott, and completed in 1964, the church is a prominent landmark on the busy New Chester... Read More
A neo-Romanesque brick church of 1912 by Edward Goldie. The church is locally listed and its high nave and west front... Read More
A small neo-Romanesque church of 1910, one of several nearly identical churches by Rev. Benedict Williamson, built with... Read More
An interesting modern design of 1966-7, reflecting the new liturgy of the Second Vatican Council. The centralised high... Read More
A High Victorian church of some distinction by a well-known Catholic architect, in the manner of E. W. Pugin and... Read More