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 unpretentious but effective design by Arthur Young in fourteenth-century style, the first of a handful of English... Read More
A plain modern church, built as part of an integrated complex of social centre and presbytery. The rather forbidding... Read More
St Joseph's is of special interest for the quality of its design and craftsmanship and as a fine example of a late... Read More
A simple modern prefabricated timber structure of limited architectural interest.For some years after the war Mass... Read More
A 1950s church built on a site established as a Catholic mission half a century earlier. It is typical of the work... Read More
A large post-war church built to serve a housing estate, economically built and with a functional interior. The... Read More
A large red brick late nineteenth-century Gothic Revival town church, designed by a well-regarded North East firm. The... Read More
A nicely detailed, conventionally designed church built to serve a post-war housing estate, by the well-regarded... Read More
A modest design, built to serve a post-war housing estate, economically built and with a functional interior. The... Read More
A typical example of the many modest, well-built churches built to serve post-war housing estates. The interior is... Read More
A good Early English Gothic design by J. A. Hansom, with a fine interior retaining original and early fittings of... Read More
A converted thatched timber barn, dating probably from the seventeenth century. It is one of two remaining buildings of... Read More