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).
A small brick church built for the Lithuanian community in the East End in the simple Romanesque style which the... Read More
A handsome Italianate church built in 1906 for the Redemptorist order, along with a monastery incorporating Windhill... Read More
A design of the early 1960s by the F. X. Velarde Partnership, displaying characteristics typical of that practice, and... Read More
A large church of the 1950s, built on a traditional longitudinal plan, serving the post-war expansion of Borehamwood... Read More
A late nineteenth-century Gothic Revival church, restored in the 1950s after bomb damage. It retains a few of the... Read More
A plain Gothic Revival church built for the Dominican Sisters by Gilbert Blount. The church was later extended by the... Read More
A modest church with a domestic external appearance, originally dating from 1898 and extended several times since. The... Read More
A brick-built, mid-Victorian church, constructed on a small budget yet a building of great charm and some... Read More
A small chapel in the basement of a former school of 1901. The church is the successor to a school-chapel of c.1850.... Read More
A Gothic Revival flint and stone church built in 1914-15 from designs by Arthur Young, and financed in part by the... Read More
The church is part of a complex built in the 1920s to serve the new Watling Estate. The picturesque exterior with its... Read More
A large, late 1950s brick church, conventionally planned as it predates the changes emanating from Vatican II. The... Read More