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Warwickshire, Coventry, Tile Hill, Jardine Crescent, St Oswald's Church

Church (20th Century)

Site Name Warwickshire, Coventry, Tile Hill, Jardine Crescent, St Oswald's Church

Classification Church (20th Century)

Alternative Name(s) Church Of St Oswald

Canmore ID 284696

Site Number SP27NE 1

NGR SP 2869 7882

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/284696

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
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Digital Images

St Oswald's Church, Tile Hill.
Interior.
Detail of Sculpture.
St Oswald's Church, Tile Hill.
Interior.
Detail of Sculpture.Coventry churches.
Sections of stone font and font cover.Coventry churches.
Plan showing thermoplastic tile floor patterns.Perspectives and site plans of St Oswald's Church, Church of St John the Divine and St Chad's Church, Coventry.Perspective.Coventry churches.
Perspective.Sketch of chairs for churches in Coventry.Coventry churches.
Elevation of chancel.Coventry churches.
Detail of font.Coventry churches.
Design for cross.Perspective of interior.Site plan.St Oswald's Church, Tile Hill.
View from NE.St Oswald's Church, Tile Hill.
Site plan, plans, and elevations.Coventry churches.
Plans, sections, and elevations of vicarages.

Coventry churches.
Details of alternative schemes for fonts and bases.Coventry churches.
Detail of pulpits.Sketch of chair.St Oswald's Church, Tile Hill.
View from NW.St Oswald's Church, Tile Hill.
Interior.
View of nave and altar.Elevations and details of bell tower.Coventry churches.
Sketches of alternative scheme for altars.St Oswald's Church, Tile Hill.
N and E elevations and sections.Coventry churches.
Detail of pews.Sketch of chairs.Coventry churches.
Details of window schedule.Coventry churches.
Interior perspective towards altar.Sections, elevations and details, including bell tower.Perspectives and site plans.Sketch details of font and font covers.

Administrative Areas

  • Council Not Applicable
  • Parish Not Applicable
  • Former Region Not Applicable
  • Former District Not Applicable
  • Former County Not Applicable

Sir Basil Spence

Building Notes

In 1954 Bishop Gorton commissioned Basil Spence to design three low-cost parish churches to serve new housing areas around Coventry, each seating 250 people. These were St Chad's, Bell Green; St Oswald's, Tile Hill; and St John the Divine at Willenhall. In the interest of economy the churches were all built by George Wimpey & Company. They were consecrated mid-July 1957 by Gorton's successor, Bishop Cuthbert Bardsley. Spence was already engaged in designing Coventry Cathedral when he received these commissions.

On each site a similar church, bell tower, hall and vicarage are laid out in varying ways. The church walls are made of lightweight, rough textured, 'no fines' concrete, so called because it contained no fine gravel. Concrete frames divide the length of the nave into ten sections. Different patterns of green, blue and red are painted on the ceilings of each church. Basil Spence and Partners also designed most of the original furnishings, including pulpits, altars, fonts, and pews. Decorating the concrete bell towers are sheets of enamelled steel in lattice frames. The vicarages were built in brick between 1961-62.

At St Oswald's there are small windows along the upper and lower part of the nave. Tall side windows light the altar. Behind the altar is a textile hanging with the figures of St Aidan and St Oswald by Gerald Holtom, designer of the CND (Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament) emblem. A bronze sculpture of the Crucifixion on the outside of the east wall is by the Afro-American artist Carroll Simms.

Archive Details and Summary

The Sir Basil Spence Archive holds 19 manuscript folders, 198 drawings, and 34 photographs relating to the three Coventry parish churches. The drawings show all stages of design from site plans and first sketches to measured details, many of which were to be applied to all three churches. Photographs document the sites before and after construction.

Correspondence in the Archive shows that Spence was keen to complete the work with a small budget because estimates for the cathedral were under close public scrutiny at the time. Building with 'no fines' concrete was cheap and quick, and the builders were familiar with using it on the local housing. All three churches were built from War Damage Commission funds which would only have paid for one similar sized church in brick. There is little representation of the keen local newspaper coverage of construction, and there are no photographs of the vicarages.

This text was written as one of the outputs of the Sir Basil Spence Archive Project, supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund, 2005-08.

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