Latitude: 51.4425 / 51°26'32"N
Longitude: 0.3365 / 0°20'11"E
OS Eastings: 562475
OS Northings: 174089
OS Grid: TQ624740
Mapcode National: GBR YV.ZD3
Mapcode Global: VHHP2.S07J
Plus Code: 9F32C8RP+XH
Entry Name: Church of Our Lady of the Assumption
Listing Date: 26 July 1983
Grade: II*
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1081094
English Heritage Legacy ID: 356853
ID on this website: 101081094
Location: Northfleet, Gravesham, Kent, DA11
County: Kent
District: Gravesham
Electoral Ward/Division: Northfleet North
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Northfleet
Traditional County: Kent
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Kent
Church of England Parish: Northfleet and Rosherville
Church of England Diocese: Rochester
Tagged with: Church building
NORTHFLEET
10/1/125 THE HILL
26-JUL-83 THE HILL
Church of Our Lady of the Assumption
II*
Roman Catholic church. Built 1913-16 to the designs of Sir Giles Gilbert Scott. Reinforced concrete, faced in brown Crowborough brick, flat roofs. Rectangular plan with west tower and door. Gothic vertical emphasis as used by Scott in Liverpool Cathedral, but here developed for the first time in monumental brick and reinforced concrete. Channelled base. Low aisles and bands of clerestory windows set against tall gabled west chapels and east transepts. Interior little altered, with three-bay brick and concrete arcades whose continuous mouldings are unbroken by capitals. High square vestigial sanctuary arch with hanging rood, high reredos by Scott of 1953-4 and high altar (a modern freestanding altar at the foot of the sanctuary steps has enabled the original arrangement to be retained behind. Choir stalls and pews, with pulpit to side. Chairs serve aisle chapels; the Lady Chapel altar and reredos by Scott date from 1923-4. A similar square frame to the tower arch, in which is an organ loft and alternative space for choir. Hanging pendant lights from trabeated ceiling.
Our Lady of the Assumption is significant in the work of this leading twentieth-century ecclesiastical architect in being the first of his brick churches to achieve a truly monumental, subliminal quality. Scott was later to further explore the medium in his secular work, notably at Bankside Power Station, now Tate Modern, whose qualities are anticipated here. The use of concrete was experimental, while the interior is imaginative and cohesive in its simplicity.
Source
A Stuart Gray, Edwardian Architects, London, Duckworth, 1985, p.220
Listing NGR: TQ6246874136
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