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 1936 by James O’Hanlon Hughes, with a plain and rather monumental exterior. The original double-height... Read More
A small grey brick church in the Decorated Gothic style with a presbytery attached, both designed by the local... Read More
A rare and important survival in London of a late thirteenth-century chapel, consisting of an upper and lower church,... Read More
A substantial 1950s church in the Early Christian Romanesque style, with a handsome interior.A mission was started... Read More
A functional and economical combined church and hall, built to serve an area of modern housing.St Joseph’s Home... Read More
A good many churches were being built in the Romanesque style in the 1930s, but Goldie’s church is better composed... Read More
A plain post-war neo-Georgian church which makes a positive contribution to the Epping conservation area. The... Read More
A large brick church of 1962-3 built for a parish served by the Capuchins. Stylistically it is conservative for its... Read More
The oldest church in the diocese still in use, built in 1798 on land given by the Smythe family (who also owned the... Read More
A fine church, designed in a conservative Romanesque style and carefully constructed with traditional materials. Well... Read More
An interesting and lavish curiosity as an early twentieth century ‘copy’ of a Baroque church on a small scale,... Read More
A modest church of the 1960s, conventionally longitudinal in plan, and displaying architectural and decorative detail... Read More