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Architects & Places

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All Saints, Hayes Lane, Kenley

Up a steep private road near Kenley Station. This is a church of 1870-72 by James Fowler. The nave was extended a bay westwards in 1897 and a baptistry added in 1902.

St Mary Help of Christians, Coulsdon Road, Old Colulsdon (Roman Catholic)

This church and built in 1965 and replaced what is now the church hall next door which was built in 1955.

St John the Evangelist, Canons Hill, Old Coulsdon

Several churches in the London suburbs had to be adapted from small medieval buildings to one that could cope with a much larger suburban population. In this case the south aisle was demolished and much larger aisles, nave and chancel were added at right angles in 1958 and designed by Sebastian Comper. The old church is now an entrance area with the chancel used as a chapel and the north aisle as a vestry. The new church interiors are in the last 6 rows.

St Mary and St Shenoudah, Rickman Hill, Coulsdon (Coptic Orthodox)

Well away from the town centre, up a steep hill. The congregation was formed in 1988 and uses a building that was opened in 1928 as St Francis CoE church, extended in the 1960s but declared redundant in 1987. It had been a chapel to St Andrew’s church. The architect is unknown.

St Aidan, Chipstead Valley Road, Coulsdon (Roman Catholic)

Lower down the hill than St Andrew but firmly in suburbia. The original church was begun in 1932 by Adrian Scott and completed in 1966 by Burles, Newton & Partners.

St Andrew, Woodmansterne Road, Coulsdon

High up above the town centre of Coulsdon this church was built between 1911 and 1914 and designed by F.H. Greenway & J.E. Newberry but was incomplete until 1962 when a permanent west end was added by John Stammers. The screen between the entrance and the church has some large panes of engraved glass which proved difficult to photograph. There is some post-WW2 stained glass by Ninian Comper.

 

St Alban, Whitehorse Lane, Thornton Heath

On a prominent street corner site at the eastern end of Thornton Heath’s main street. A large church by Bucknall and Comper, it was the first Comper church, although most of the design is by Bucknall. The nave dates from 1889 and the chancel from 1894.

St Augustine, St Augustines Avenue, South Croydon

A large church, about a mile south of St Peter, this one by John Oldrid Scott, dating from 1881-84. It was subdivided in 1989 with the nave and aisles converted to a hall, offices and meeting rooms, toilets and a kitchen. The worship area is now in the crossing, transepts and chancel.

St Peter, St Peters Road, South Croydon

Very close to the station in a large sloping churchyard. It is by George Gilbert Scott and dates from 1849-1851, the tower and spire not being completed until 1864 with rebuilding after a fire in 1865.

St Saviour, St Saviour’s Road, North Croydon

In the midst of Victorian housing north of the town centre. It was designed by A.R. Mullins and built 1867, with some additions in 1880, The western end has been divided off at ground floor level to form a hall with a large balcony area above looking into the nave.