The Archdiocese of Westminster was founded on 29 September 1850. It covers the Greater London boroughs north of the Thames and west of Waltham Forest and Newham, as well as the districts of Staines and Sunbury-on-Thames, and the county of Hertfordshire.The cathedral is in Victoria, London, and is dedicated to the Precious Blood. 216 churches were visited for Taking Stock (2013).
An interwar church in a simple version of the architect T.H.B. Scott’s preferred round-arched style.New Barnet... Read More
An Italianate church of the inter-war period which was never completed to the original design. The interior is an... Read More
A substantial church planned and partially built in the interwar period but not completed until 1959. Its brick-built... Read More
A 1960s concrete-framed church by Scott & Jaques, moving away from Scott’s earlier basilican Romanesque style in... Read More
A 1920s red-brick suburban church built in a round-arched style, with a spacious, light interior.The parish was... Read More
A French Gothic Revival design by Henry Clutton, for the Oblates of St Charles. Shortly after its completion in 1860,... Read More
A small urban church in the Gothic Revival style built on a tight site. It is notable for its elaborate furnishings... Read More
A major building by A. W. N. Pugin, built towards the end of the architect’s life and completed after his death. The... Read More
An attractive small rural Gothic Revival church of 1911, replacing a Gothick chapel of 1818. The church was built from... Read More
A new church, thoughtfully designed and with some good quality fittings. It makes a reasonable architectural... Read More
A small plain church built adjacent to the school where the mission was founded. The church was later extended... Read More
A church in the Perpendicular Gothic style typical of the period just before the First World War. The Sacred Heart... Read More