1
Winwick Lane, Lane Head
Winwick Lane looking towards the junction of Newton Road, Lane Head. The former cottages have been converted to one large house.
Image: © Sue Adair
Taken: 7 Jul 2009
0.06 miles
2
Heath Lane / Newton Road Junction
Image: © James Sutton
Taken: 1 May 2004
0.08 miles
3
Kenyon Lane
Image: © Alex McGregor
Taken: 12 Jun 2013
0.08 miles
4
Baled hay
Snatched from the car window while in a traffic queue. It looks like somebody's front garden, but it's Dickenson's Farm.
Image: © Ian Greig
Taken: 4 Oct 2011
0.09 miles
5
Old Boundary Marker by the B5207, Kenyon Lane, Lowton
Parish Boundary Marker by the B5207, in parish of Golborne (Wigan District), Kenyon Lane, Lowton, outside Boundary House No. 20, 25m from junction with Delamere Avenue.
Inscription reads:-
BOUN DARY
KENYON LOWTON
Surveyed
Milestone Society National ID: LA_LOWKEN01pb
Image: © Milestone Society
Taken: Unknown
0.10 miles
6
St Catherine's RC Church, Lowton
Known as the "thre'penny bit church" due to it having 6 sides, St Catherine's was opened in 1959. The bells were transferred to the tower from St. Lewis', Croft.
Image: © Sue Adair
Taken: 7 Jul 2009
0.13 miles
7
St. Catherine of Siena, Lane Head
Formerly a Catholic church, the building has been closed on health and safety grounds, and is unlikely to reopen because of the high costs of putting the building to rights.
Image: © philandju
Taken: 5 Jul 2012
0.15 miles
8
St Catherine of Siena, Lowton
Along the A580 and beyond the village of Astley and St Stephen, one shortly arrives at St Catherine of Siena. This Roman Catholic church, built between 1957-59, was intended to serve housing estates proposed to the north and west of Lowton.
In the 1950s, a combination of population migration, urban development, and relatively high attendances saw the Roman Catholic Church invest heavily in developing urban areas such as Lowton. However, the subsequent decline in religious observance has left many dioceses oversupplied with places of worship. Rationalising such an extensive property portfolio tends to favour older, more traditional churches, placing others, like St Catherine, at risk: despite being well-attended and well-maintained, this church closed 2011 and is facing imminent demolition.
St Catherine’s hexagonal nave (described below) anticipated the ‘church in the round’ configuration seen in later churches such as Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King, Liverpool (1967), and is critical to our understanding of the evolution of post-war ecclesiastical building types. Designed by Weightman & Bullen, a north-west firm of architects established in the nineteenth century, the practice’s pre-war churches were fairly traditional. However, by the 1950s, the firm was employing graduates schooled in Modernist principles: Patricia Brown, an alumna of the Liverpool School of Architecture, was the architect responsible for St Catherine and, as Robert Proctor, author of Building the Modern Church: Roman Catholic Church Architecture in Britain, 1955 to 1975, states:
‘St Catherine’s seems to be the earliest of the firm’s churches in which a fully-fledged interest in modernism is seen.’
The nave and sanctuary of St Catherine are housed within a hexagonal form whose reinforced concrete frame is expressed externally – each side of the hexagon divided into three structural bays. The lower portion of this double-height structure is infilled with red-brown brickwork with abutting structures, including a single-storey flat roofed narthex, in matching brick with decorative features. The upper portion is generally clear-glazed to eaves level, although a band of alternating blue and clear glazing sits immediately above the brickwork. The sidewalls of the sanctuary also include vertical panels of coloured glass.
Image: © Matt Harrop
Taken: 5 Dec 2016
0.16 miles
9
St. Catherine of Siena
Image: © Darrin Antrobus
Taken: 18 Mar 2014
0.16 miles
10
St Catherine of Siena, Lowton
Along the A580 and beyond the village of Astley and St Stephen, one shortly arrives at St Catherine of Siena. This Roman Catholic church, built between 1957-59, was intended to serve housing estates proposed to the north and west of Lowton.
In the 1950s, a combination of population migration, urban development, and relatively high attendances saw the Roman Catholic Church invest heavily in developing urban areas such as Lowton. However, the subsequent decline in religious observance has left many dioceses oversupplied with places of worship. Rationalising such an extensive property portfolio tends to favour older, more traditional churches, placing others, like St Catherine, at risk: despite being well-attended and well-maintained, this church closed 2011 and is facing imminent demolition.
St Catherine’s hexagonal nave (described below) anticipated the ‘church in the round’ configuration seen in later churches such as Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King, Liverpool (1967), and is critical to our understanding of the evolution of post-war ecclesiastical building types. Designed by Weightman & Bullen, a north-west firm of architects established in the nineteenth century, the practice’s pre-war churches were fairly traditional. However, by the 1950s, the firm was employing graduates schooled in Modernist principles: Patricia Brown, an alumna of the Liverpool School of Architecture, was the architect responsible for St Catherine and, as Robert Proctor, author of Building the Modern Church: Roman Catholic Church Architecture in Britain, 1955 to 1975, states:
‘St Catherine’s seems to be the earliest of the firm’s churches in which a fully-fledged interest in modernism is seen.’
The nave and sanctuary of St Catherine are housed within a hexagonal form whose reinforced concrete frame is expressed externally – each side of the hexagon divided into three structural bays. The lower portion of this double-height structure is infilled with red-brown brickwork with abutting structures, including a single-storey flat roofed narthex, in matching brick with decorative features. The upper portion is generally clear-glazed to eaves level, although a band of alternating blue and clear glazing sits immediately above the brickwork. The sidewalls of the sanctuary also include vertical panels of coloured glass.
Image: © Matt Harrop
Taken: 5 Dec 2016
0.16 miles