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 church of some townscape presence, accretive in character yet harmonious, and with some good internal features. Over... Read More
An outstanding church of striking neo-Norman design, designed by Joseph Hansom from plans drawn up in France by an... Read More
As designed in the 1920s, when Margate was still a flourishing resort, St Anne’s was to be a large and splendid... Read More
A confident exercise in Brutalist architecture built in 1963-4 and influenced by Gillespie Kidd and Coia’s St... Read More
The mid-nineteenth century successor to a stone-built chapel of 1798, and a rugged design by J. A. Hansom, built at... Read More
A plain dual-purpose post-war church and hall by the prolific firm of Reynolds & Scott. The village of Clowne... Read More
F. X. Velarde’s first church, designed when he was still in the office of Weightman & Bullen. The tall bell tower... Read More
A substantial church built in 1915 by the Benedictines to serve the expanding industrial community of Clydach. An... Read More
A 1950s church of conventional plan form, with modern construction techniques. It has a concrete frame, buff brick... Read More
A decidedly pretty design, unusual in Goodhart-Rendel’s oeuvre in combining Georgian vernacular and subtle Mannerist... Read More
A modest Gothic chapel of the 1850s, making a positive contribution to the local conservation area. A temporary... Read More
The church forms part of a modernist monastery complex begun in 1940 by Dom Constantine Bosschaerts, a pioneer of... Read More