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 simple red brick Gothic church of late nineteenth century date, occupying a prominent position in the townscape of... Read More
A modern church of the early 1970s, with the emphasis on the main top-lit worship space and a minimum of external... Read More
A large interwar Gothic Revival design by C. H. Hill of Abergavenny, not imaginative or original in its design but... Read More
An early 1960s church with interesting original glass, carvings and mural painting. The church is of striking... Read More
A modest and fairly conventional design of the 1950s, built to serve a new housing estate. The church was closed in... Read More
Built through the patronage of the de Trafford family to designs by W. H. Rawle, and a building of some presence and... Read More
A lightweight prefabricated building of the 1950s, so designed on account of fear of mining subsidence. The building is... Read More
A plain early twentieth century church of Gothic Arts and Crafts character, designed to serve a religious community as... Read More
A church of modest architectural ambitions, notable above all for its old-fashioned design (the medievalising tower... Read More
A functional design by a prolific post-war practice.The Eccleston area was a centre of recusancy, with a Catholic... Read More
Built as a church hall in 1952, of little architectural note, although the 1962 sanctuary by Maguire & Murray is... Read More
An early twentieth-century church designed originally in a Free Perpendicular Gothic which now has a mixed character... Read More