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 late 1950s multi-purpose building, later substantially extended. While not of architectural or historical... Read More
A good example of the modest Nonconformist type of Catholic chapel built in the early years of the nineteenth century.... Read More
A post-war church built to replace a small chapel of 1819, which itself was the successor to a chapel in Dunkenhalgh... Read More
A good example of an E. W. Pugin church which retains much of its original character and furnishings. Notable also... Read More
A modest red brick church by J. H. Langtry-Langton in a simplified version of the Romanesque style.The parish was... Read More
A modern polygonal building of pleasing design, incorporating a number of features from the previous... Read More
A simple building of the early 1960s, with historical connections with the Blount family of Mawley Hall and good... Read More
A piece of Italy in London. The church is of a scale and significance belied by its modest contribution to the... Read More
An Italianate former Nonconformist church, built for the Countess of Huntingdon’s Connexion. Acquired just over ten... Read More
A large neo-Gothic church built by a group of French Franciscans who founded the mission. It was designed by the... Read More
Post-Vatican II church, not of special architectural or historic interest.The church is a low single-storey brick... Read More
A church of some townscape presence, accretive in character yet harmonious, and with some good internal features.Over... Read More