St Luke's Church (Liverpool)
United Kingdom /
England /
Liverpool /
Berry Street
World
/ United Kingdom
/ England
/ Liverpool
World / United Kingdom / England
memorial, church, ruins, Grade II* Listed (UK)
St Luke's Church, commonly known in Liverpool as the Bombed Out Church, is a former Anglican parish church, which is now a ruin. It stands on the corner of Berry Street and Leece Street, looking down the length of Bold Street, Liverpool, Merseyside, England. The church was built between 1811 and 1832, and was designed by John Foster, senior and John Foster, junior, father and son who were successive surveyors for the municipal Corporation of Liverpool. In addition to being a parish church, it was also intended to be used as a venue for ceremonial worship by the Corporation, and as a concert hall. It was badly damaged during the Liverpool Blitz in 1941, and remains as a roofless shell. It now stands as a memorial to those who were lost in the war, and is also a venue for exhibitions and events. The church, and the surrounding walls, gates and railings are recorded in the National Heritage List for England as designated Grade II* listed buildings.
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_St_Luke,_Liverpool
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 53°24'6"N 2°58'30"W
- Liverpool Cathedral 0.4 km
- Lady chapel 0.4 km
- Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King 0.6 km
- St Francis De Sales Roman Catholic Church & School 4.6 km
- Garston Bridge Chapel 6.5 km
- St Benets Parish club & church 10 km
- St Lawrence Churchyard, Stoak 18 km
- Holy Family Catholic Church 48 km
- Saint Melangell's Church and Centre 71 km
- St. Hywyn 134 km
- Liverpool One 0.7 km
- Baltic Triangle 0.7 km
- University of Liverpool 0.7 km
- Royal Liverpool University Hospital 1.1 km
- Queensway Tunnel (1934) 1.9 km
- Princes Park 2.2 km
- Kensington and Fairfield 2.5 km
- Sefton Park 3.3 km
- Wirral Peninsula 8 km
- Merseyside 8.7 km