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 1950s brick church in the modern Romanesque manner, with an Italianate tower. The church occupies a prominent site,... Read More
Crawley was designated a New Town in 1947 but growth was slow at first. By 1963 the population had risen to... Read More
A substantial work by Goodhart Rendel in his inimitable brick style.Built in 1955-9, the church of St Francis is a... Read More
A simple, well-proportioned, building but of no special architectural distinction.A simple cruck-built church with... Read More
A functional church of 1972-3, part of which used to be the parish hall. It incorporates one stained glass window and... Read More
The architectural claims of the building are modest; its primary significance lies in its status as the national shrine... Read More
A modest red brick Gothic church in a rural setting, attached to an earlier (seventeenth century) house. The church is... Read More
A stately design by Pugin & Pugin. The bold red brick exterior and tall tower are local landmarks, and the church... Read More
A utilitarian design of the mid-1950s, of interest only for an unusual wall painting in the sanctuary by Eleanor... Read More
A medieval parish church declared redundant in 1981 and returned to Catholic use in 1984 on a ninety-nine year lease.... Read More
A 1930 design in a stripped Romanesque manner typical of the church designs of T. H. B. Scott, with a handsome and... Read More
A good and typical example of the type of unassuming Catholic chapel built in the years between the Second Relief Act... Read More