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.
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
One of the more recent churches in the diocese, carefully designed on a compact scale and with interesting visual... Read More