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).
Quite an ambitious and original design for what was originally a monastery church with the monastery building... 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 well-designed inter-war brick church by T. H. B. Scott, in the free Romanesque style so popular for Catholic... Read More
An interwar church in the Romanesque style favoured by its architect, T.H.B. Scott, completed after the war in the... Read More
A functional but carefully-designed post-war church with a concrete portal frame.In the nineteenth century East... Read More
An Edwardian church in the Perpendicular Gothic style, with some elaborate carved detail on the west face of the... Read More
A brick-built inter-war church in an economical round-arched style, with a pleasing, light and welcoming interior. The... Read More
An early Victorian church by A. W. N. Pugin, his only complete parish church in London and one his last three major... Read More
A large Early English Gothic design by J. A. Hansom for the Servite Friars, with a modest street presence and a tall,... Read More
A late 1950s church built with a conventional longitudinal plan, typical of Catholic churches of the time. An original... Read More