St Anne's was a Roman Catholic church in Laxton Place near Regent's Park in London. The church was constructed in 1970 but fell into disuse at the turn of the 21st century and was demolished in 2019 to make way for flats.[1]
History
editThere had been a school chapel in Little Albany Street since 1857,[2] replaced in 1938 by a new church in Seaton Place.[2] The redevelopment of the area in the 1960s included provision for a new church on the corner of Laxton Place and Longford Street.[2] Cardinal Heenan laid the foundation stone on 30 May 1970 and the church opened later that year.[2]
The UK's small Chaldean community started worshipping in the church in 1991 under the Right Rev Andreas Abouna.[3] Worship continued until at least 2003, but the church had closed by 2011. It has since been demolished.
Architecture
editThe church was designed by Scott and Jaques.[2] It has curving walls of dark brick, broken up by 17 tall windows.[2] Trusses of prestressed concrete support a copper roof.[2] The altar is stone, but the rest of the furnishings are wooden.[2]
Future
editIn 2011, the Roman Catholic Church proposed that St Anne's be used as the principal church of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham for former Anglicans. Damian Thompson, the religious affairs commentator for The Daily Telegraph and a prominent supporter of the ordinariate, has rejected this proposal and has described St Anne's as a "cross between a public lavatory and a Christian Science Reading Room".[1] Thompson preferred that St Etheldreda's Church in Ely Place, the only medieval Roman Catholic church in London, to be used by the ordinariate.[1]
See also
edit- Regent's Park Estate – council estate to the north
- Regent's Place – new development on other side of Longford St
References
edit- ^ a b c Thompson, Damian (15 March 2011). "Look at this revolting building, and guess what the Catholic bishops are thinking of doing with it". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 18 March 2011. Retrieved 22 March 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Evinson, Denis (1998), Catholic churches of London, Continuum International, pp. 84–85, ISBN 978-1-85075-819-8
- ^ Watts, Greg (5 April 2003), "'Jesus talked of peace. There will be no peace anywhere because of this'", The Times, London[dead link ]