Weoley Hill United Reformed Church, Birmingham | |
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52°25′58″N 1°57′26″W / 52.4329°N 1.9573°W | |
Denomination | United Reformed |
Website | www.weoleyhillchurch.org.uk |
Weoley Hill United Reformed Church is at the junction of Bryony Road and Green Meadow Road in Birmingham. It is notable architecturally for its unusual Scottish gable. [1] Other sources refer to it as a Danish-style gable. [2]
The church was opened on 1 July 1933. It was built to designs by the architect J.R. Armstrong (architect to the Bournville Village Trust). The church cost £600 (equivalent to £53,804 in 2023). [3]
Initially it was a Presbyterian Chapel, but became a United Reformed Church in the union of the Presbyterian Church of England and the Congregational Church in England and Wales in 1972.
The organ was built by Conacher of Sheffield. A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register. [4]