St Andrew

St Andrew's Church serves a village of approximately 1200 people. It is a well loved and well used building, with a very active congregation.

About this building

For more information visit on this building visit www.explorechurches.org/church/st-andrew-whissendine

Other nearby buildings

St. Matthew's Church

St. Matthew's Church is a classicist church from the early 19th century. The tower and west portico were built by Thomas Cundy Jr between 1826 and 1829, modelled on St John's, Smith Square in Westminster, while the nave and apse were built in 1911, by J. B. Gridley. In 1970, the church had to be demolished as part of the construction of the reservoir, as its floor was below the proposed water level. Following public protest, the lower half was filled with stones and rubble, and a concrete cover was built just below the level of the windows. An embankment was built around the church, giving it a prominent place at the water's edge. The structure once housed a museum of the history of Rutland Water.

Glass Angel/Flickr

St Wulfram

St Wulfram's slender and graceful spire, distinctively flanked by its four spirelets, would very likely have been the tallest in England when it was built in 1280-1300, and it is still one of the most elegant.

Robin Leicester via Wikimedia

Synagogue in Leicester

The Synagogue in Leicester is an Ashkenazi synagogue built in 1897-98 by architect Arthur Wakerley. The synagogue was restored in 1938 and 1997-98. This brick building in the Neo-Romanesque style still serves as a synagogue.