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 modern design of the late 1960s, built as a daughter church to St Winefride’s, on a fan-shaped plan to encourage... Read More
A fine example of a Catholic church of the 1850s and 60s built on Puginian principles. The architects, William Wardell... Read More
An interwar church in the Norman Revival style, built to replace a school-chapel of 1899 (demolished). The most... Read More
A post-war Norman Revival church, notable for being built with voluntary labour, apparently without the involvement of... Read More
A small functional chapel built in 1931 on the outskirts of Huncoat village. A west porch was added later; this has... Read More
A cruciform, simple brick building given external interest by the use of cast stone modern tracery to the windows. The... Read More
An Italian Romanesque church built at the start of the twentieth century from designs by Edward Goldie. It has a good... Read More
A large suburban church of 1960-61 in what was then a thoroughly up-to-date style. It is by a respected firm who... Read More
A mid-1960s church with an elongated polygonal plan, reflecting a desire to reconcile post-Vatican II liturgical... Read More
A modest stone-built Arts and Crafts church in an attractive village setting. The dedication evokes the memory of... Read More
A large suburban church of the early 1960s, built for an expanding congregation and anticipating the liturgical reforms... Read More
A modest church built as a Baptist hall at the turn of the twentieth century, with a welcoming... Read More