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 interwar brick church, built to replace an earlier tin church. The parish complex includes a bowling green, one of... Read More
A country house chapel of the 1820s which was rebuilt in its current location in the 1840s, and as such has been... Read More
A well detailed design of the 1960s, with successful additions and furnishings of the early twenty-first century. The... Read More
A modest hall/chapel of the 1960s, built economically to serve a rural community. The building is now a day nursery and... Read More
A plain modern building which doubles as a hall for use by the local community and neighbouring school. Mass was... Read More
A large town centre church convincingly built in East Anglian style by J. J. Scoles for the Jesuits in 1848-50, with... Read More
A late eighteenth century village Congregational chapel which underwent a liturgically advanced remodelling after... Read More
The church is very much a product of its time. Externally it is not a building of great distinction but everything is... Read More
A modern, functional design, serving a post-war estate. The church is dedicated to St John Payne, martyred at... Read More
A Gothic Revival church by William W. Wardell of c.1846–1851, which catered for a congregation which included Royal... Read More
A tall, mainstream church of the later Gothic Revival by Henry John Hansom, son of the better-known church architect J.... Read More
A utilitarian dual-purpose building of the 1970s, incorporating a stone font from the predecessor... Read More