
Church architecture in Scotland incorporates all church building within the modern borders of Scotland, from the earliest Christian structures in the sixth century until the present day. The early Christian churches for which there is evidence are basic masonry-built constructions on the west coast and islands. As Christianity spread, local churches tended to remain much simpler than their English counterparts. By the eighth century more sophisticatedashlar block-built buildings began to be constructed. From the eleventh century, there were larger and more ornateRomanesque buildings, as withDunfermline Abbey andSt Magnus Cathedral in Orkney. From the twelfth century the introduction of new monastic orders led to a boom in ecclesiastical building, often using English and Continental forms. From the thirteenth century elements of the EuropeanGothic style began to appear in Scotland, culminating in buildings such asGlasgow Cathedral and the rebuiltMelrose Abbey.Renaissance influences can be seen in a move to a low-massive style that was probably influenced by contacts with Italy and the Netherlands.
From the mid-sixteenth century theReformation revolutionised church architecture in Scotland. It resulted in a rejection of the elaborate ornamentation of existing churches. New churches were produced in a plain style, often with a T-plan that emphasised the pulpit and preaching. This style was adopted by bothPresbyterian andEpiscopalian wings of the ScottishKirk, but there were some attempts to introduceBaroque elements into church building after theRestoration. In the eighteenth century the influence ofJames Gibbs led to churches that employed classical elements, with apedimented rectangular plan and often with a steeple. This classicism continued into the early nineteenth century, but became increasingly controversial and began to be rejected for a version of theGothic Revival, which flourished into the early twentieth century. Between the world wars, a form ofNeo-Romanesque became the norm for new churches. In the second half of the twentieth century new churches were highly influenced byModernism, resulting in rectangular and irregularly shaped buildings, built in new materials, although many of these were later demolished. As the level of new building reduced from the 1970s there was a move to functional and unambitious new churches, but in the 1980s there was a move back to more striking and original designs.

The introduction of Christianity into Scotland from Ireland from the sixth century led to the construction of the first churches. These may originally have been wooden, like that excavated atWhithorn,[1] but most of those for which evidence survives from this era are basic masonry-built churches, beginning on the west coast and islands and spreading south and east.[2] Early chapels tended to have square-ended converging walls, similar to Irish chapels of this period.[3] Medieval parish church architecture in Scotland was typically much less elaborate than in England, with many churches remaining simple oblongs, withouttransepts andaisles, and often without towers. In theHighlands they were often even simpler, many built of rubble masonry and sometimes indistinguishable from the outside from houses or farm buildings.[4]
Monasteries also differed significantly from those on the continent, and were often an isolated collection of wooden huts surrounded by a wall.[5] AtEileach an Naoimh in theInner Hebrides there are huts, a chapel,refectory, guest house, barns and other buildings. Most of these were of timber andwattle construction and probably thatched with heather andturves. They were later rebuilt in stone, with underground cells and circular"beehive" huts like those used in Ireland. Similar sites have been excavated on Bute, Orkney and Shetland.[3] From the eighth century more sophisticated buildings emerged.[2] The development of earlyashlar masonry produced block-built stone buildings, like the eleventh centuryround tower atBrechin Cathedral and the square towers ofDunblane Cathedral andThe Church of St Rule.[2]

After the eleventh century, as masonry techniques advanced, ashlar blocks became more rectangular, resulting in more stable walls that could incorporate refined architectural moulding and detailing that can be seen incorbelling,buttressing,lintels andarching. At the same time there was increasing influence from English and continental European designs, known as Romanesque. TheRomanesque style had its origins in Roman building techniques and early churches in theByzantine Empire andItaly[6] and was characterised by massive reinforced walls and round arches that could bear the weight of roundedbarrel vault roofs.[7] The introduction of this style to Scotland is associated with the ecclesiastical reforms that began in the reign ofMáel Coluim III (r. 1058–93), bringing continental ideas of monasticism and church organisation to the country. The oldest Romanesque church in Scotland is probably thesmall chapel built for Máel Coluim's wifeMargaret onCastle Rock, Edinburgh, with a vaulted semi-circularapse.[6] In the twelfth century a number of new parish churches were built by lords on their land. They were often small aisless buildings with two or three connected cells, each of diminishing size, ending in a rounded apse. One of the best preserved is atDalmeny in Lothian.[8]
St. Regulus Chapel at St. Andrews dates from around 1150 and was probably built as areliquary church. Only the aisleless choir and tall square tower survive. Its detailing derives from work on a church atWharram-le-Street in England and it may have been carried out by the same Yorkshire masons.[9] The first monastic establishment built in the Romanesque style wasDunfermline Abbey, begun at the behest of Queen Margaret about 1074. An existing small chapel was expanded with a square choir and rounded apse. About fifty years later it was replaced by a grander cruciform church of which only thenave now survives.[10] Thechevron pattern in the detailing on the piers was modelled on that atDurham Cathedral.[2] Similarly,St Magnus Cathedral in Orkney, begun in 1137, may have employed masons who had worked at Durham, with which it shares a similar pattern of great round arches based on thick cylindrical pillars.[11] The arrival of thenew monastic orders in Scotland from the twelfth century led to a boom in ecclesiastical building using English and continental forms, including abbeys atKelso,Holyrood,St Andrews[11] andJedburgh, one of the most complete Romanesque buildings to survive.[12]

The style that developed from the Romanesque, originating in twelfth-century France, is now known asGothic. It was characterised bypointed arches,ribbed vaults andflying buttresses.[2] It was brought to Britain by theCistercians, whose abbeys retained thick walls, but pierced them withlancet arches with slender pointed arches. This style became characteristic of theearly Gothic in Britain and can be seen atDundrennan Abbey, begun around 1142, which resembles religious foundations in northern England.[13] The style can also be seen in the East end ofElgin Cathedral, which incorporated typical European Gothic mouldings andtracery.[2]

A more elaborate style known asdecorated Gothic, applying ornamentation to vaults andpillars, particularly using curved motifs, began to be adopted in the thirteenth century and was characteristic of Scottish church building in the fourteenth century. It was used atDunblane Cathedral, built in the thirteenth century, particularly to decorate thenave and East end. AtFortrose in the Highlands the elaborate decoration of this style is still visible in the south aisle. One of the finest examples isSweetheart Abbey nearDumfries, a Cistercian monastery, named after the burial ofJohn de Balliol's heart alongside the body of his wife.[14] The period of theWars of Independence (1296–1357) saw a large number of ecclesiastical buildings ruined, includingMelrose andJedburgh Abbeys. Church building was largely confined to the parish churches in the relatively secure areas like Fife, as atSt. Monans, originally a church of theDominican friars.[15]
In the fifteenth century, continental builders are known to have been working in Scotland. French master-mason John Morrow was employed at the building ofGlasgow Cathedral and the rebuilding of Melrose Abbey, both considered fine examples of Gothic architecture.[16] Compared with after the Reformation, the interiors of churches were often elaborate, with highly decorated sacrament houses, like the ones surviving atDeskford andKinkell.[4] The carvings atRosslyn Chapel, depicting the progression of theseven deadly sins, were created in the mid-fifteenth century. They are considered some of the finest in the Gothic style.[17] Late Medieval Scottish churches also often contained elaborate burial monuments, like the Douglas tombs in the town ofDouglas.[4]

The impact of theRenaissance on ecclesiastical architecture can be seen in the re-adoption of low-massive church building with round arches and pillars, in contrast to theperpendicular Gothic style that was particularlydominant in England in the late Medieval era. The adoption of the low-massive style may have been influenced by close contacts with Rome and the Netherlands, and was perhaps a conscious reaction against English forms in favour of continental ones. It can be seen in the nave ofDunkeld Cathedral, begun in 1406, the facade ofSt Mary's, Haddington from the 1460s and in the chapel of Bishop Elphinstone'sKings College, Aberdeen (1500–09).[18] About fortycollegiate churches were established in Scotland in late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. Many, likeTrinity College, Edinburgh, showed a combination of Gothic and Renaissance styles.[19] The early sixteenth century sawcrown steeples built on churches with royal connections, symbolising imperial monarchy, as atSt. Giles Cathedral, Edinburgh.[20]

From about 1560, the Reformation revolutionised church architecture in Scotland. Calvinists rejected ornamentation in places of worship. With no need for elaborate buildings divided up by ritual there was widespread destruction of Medieval church furnishings, ornaments and decoration.[21] There was a need to adapt old buildings and build new churches suitable for reformed services, particularly by putting the pulpit and preaching at the centre of worship.
Many of the earliest buildings were simple gabled rectangles, a style that continued to be built into the seventeenth century. Examples includeDunnottar Castle in the 1580s,Greenock (1591) andDurness (1619),[22] These new buildings often had windows on the south wall and none on the north, which became a unique feature of Reformation kirks. There were continuities with pre-Reformation materials, with some churches using rubble, as atKemback in Fife (1582). Others employed stone and a few added wooden steeples, as atBurntisland (1592).[23] The church ofGreyfriars, Edinburgh, built between 1602 and 1620, used a rectangular layout with a largely Gothic form, but that atDirleton (1612), had a more sophisticated classical style.[22]
A variation of the rectangular church that developed in post-Reformation Scotland was the T-shaped plan, often used when adapting existing churches, which allowed the maximum number of parishioners to be near the pulpit. They can be seen at Kemback andPrestonpans after 1595. It continued to be used into the seventeenth century as atWeem (1600),Anstruther Easter, Fife (1634–44) andNew Cumnock (1657). In the seventeenth century aGreek cross plan was used for churches such asCawdor (1619) andFenwick (1643). In most of these cases one arm of the cross would have been closed off as a laird's aisle, meaning that they were in effect T-plan churches.[22] Larger churches often had a steeple, as atTron Kirk, Edinburgh (1636–47).[24]

By the later seventeenth century both the Presbyterian and episcopalian wings of the church had adopted the modestly sized and plain form of churches that had emerged after the Reformation.[24] Most had a centralised plan with two or three arms, in a rectangular or T-planned arrangement. Steeples continued to be a major feature, either centrally on the long axis, or on an end gable, in as had been the case in pre-Reformation churches.[24] As a result, there was little of theBaroque extravagance in church building seen on the Continent and England.[25] Some minor innovations may indicate a move back toward episcopacy in the Restoration era.Lauder Church was built bySir William Bruce in 1673 for theDuke of Lauderdale, who championed the bishops in the reign ofCharles II and the Gothic windows of which may have emphasised antiquity, but its basic Greek cross plan remained within the common framework of new churches.[24] The drive to episcopalian forms of worship may have resulted in more linear patterns, including rectangular plans with the pulpit on the end opposite the entrance. The major exceptions to the standard pattern are in the work ofJames Smith, who had become aJesuit in his youth.[26] These included the rebuilding ofHolyrood Abbey undertaken forJames VII in 1687, which was outfitted in an elaborate style. In 1691 Smith designed the mausoleum of SirGeorge Mackenzie of Rosehaugh, inGreyfriars Kirkyard, a circular structure modelled on theTempietto di San Pietro in Montorio, designed byDonato Bramante (1444–1514).[25] TheLatin Cross form, increasingly popular inCounter Reformation Catholicism, was also used, as in Smith'sCanongate Kirk (1688–90), but here it never saw episcopal service as the Presbyterian revolution of 1689–90 occurred before it was completed and the chancel was blocked up, making it, in effect, a T-plan.[26]

In the 18th century established patterns continued, with T-shaped churches with steeples on the long side, as at New Church,Dumfries (1724–27), andNewbattle Parish Church (1727–29).William Adam'sHamilton Parish Church (1729–32), was a Greek cross plan inscribed in a circle, while John Douglas'sKillin Church (1744) was octagonal. Scots-born architectJames Gibbs was highly influential on British ecclesiastical architecture. He introduced a consciously antique style in his rebuilding ofSt Martin-in-the-Fields, London, with a massive, steepledportico and rectangular, side-aisled plan. Similar patterns in Scotland can be seen atSt Andrew's in the Square (1737–59), designed by Allan Dreghorn and built by the master mason Mungo Nasmyth, and at the smallerDonibristle Chapel (completed 1731), designed byAlexander McGill. Gibbs' own design for St. Nicholas West, Aberdeen (1752–55), had the same rectangular plan, with a nave-and-aisles, barrel-vaulted layout with superimposed pedimented front.[26] After theToleration Act 1711, episcopalians began building a limited number of new chapels including Alexander Jaffray's St Paul's chapel in Aberdeen (1721), the meeting house designed by McGill in Montrose, an Edinburgh chapel opened in 1722 andSt Andrew's-by-the-Green in Glasgow (1750–52), which adopted a simpler version of Gibbs'pedimented rectangular plan.[27]
In the second half of the 18th century, Scotland's rapidly expanding economy and population resulted in the laying out of numerousnew towns and remodelled settlements, resulting in a need for new churches to support the local residents. These includedSt Andrew's and St George's West Church, George Street, in theNew Town of Edinburgh, designed by Andrew Frazer (1782–87), followed in the tradition of Gibbs, with an oval plan, tetrastyleCorinthian portico and a tall steeple. The builder, Alexander Stevens, probably also designed the steeple ofSt Cuthbert's Church (1789–90).[28] AtFochabers, from 1776 John Baxter redesigned the village on a grid plan, with a central square focused on Bellie Church (1795–97), still following in the tradition of Gibbs, with a tetrastyle portico and steeple.[29]

In the early nineteenth century the Gibbs-influenced steepled tradition continued, as can be seen inRobert Nisbet'sInveresk Church (1803–10). A Grecian form was developed atWilliam Burn'sNorth Leith Church (1813) and St John's Episcopal Church, Edinburgh (1816). The controversy over the style of theScottish National Monument in 1816 led to the labelling of Greek temple motifs as "pagan" and relatively few columnar Greek churches were built after that in the capital. An exception wasArchibald Elliot'sBroughton Church (1820–21), which had a Doric temple front. More common in Edinburgh were churches that combined classical elements with other features, like the domed St George's,Charlotte Square (1811–14), executed byRobert Reid, or the Gracco-Baroque ofWilliam Playfair'sSt Stephen's (1827–28).[30] In Glasgow there was a tradition of grafting porticoes on to existing meeting-houses, which continued inGillespie Graham's West George Street Independent Church (1818), which was criticised as "popish", and John Baird I's Greyfriars United Secession Church (1821), which was fronted by a Roman Doric portico. Classical designs for the established Church included the redevelopment by William Stark ofSt George's-Tron Church (1807–08),David Hamilton's St Enoch's Parish Church (1827) and St Paul's Parish Church (1835).[30]
As elsewhere in Western Europe, in the nineteenth century there was a return to Medieval styles, grouped together into a Gothic revival. Early examples included Adams' St George's Episcopal Chapel in Edinburgh (1792), which included octagonal lantern onogival arches. Other examples includedJames Playfair's chapel-likeFarnell Church (c. 1789) andRichard Crichton's toweredCraig Parish Church (1799). In the early nineteenth century examples influenced by theEnglish Perpendicular includedGlenorchy Church (1810–11), built by theEarl of Breadalbane, John Paterson's octagonal reconstruction of St Paul's Church,Perth (c. 1800–07) and Fetteresso Church,Stonehaven (1810–12). Examples of a more explicitly perpendicular form can be seen in Gillespie Graham'sCollace (1813), or David Hamilton's OldErskine (1813–14).[30]

As urban populations grew, major Neo-Gothic churches were built to accommodate them. After the passing of theCatholic Relief Act, James Gillespie Graham designed St Andrew's Roman Catholic Chapel in Glasgow (1814–17). There was also growth in the Episcopal Church, which benefited from the mainly Anglican migrant English workers. In Edinburgh these were modelled on theEnglish Perpendicular, as at St Paul's York Place (1816–18), the towered St John's Chapel (1816–18) and St David's (Ramshorn) (1824–26). In Glasgow, the Ramshorn Kirk's has a T-plan and symmetrical front with tall tower.[30]
The Kirk began to concern itself with providing churches in the new towns and relatively thinly supplied Highlands, establishing a church extension committee in 1828. Led byThomas Chalmers, by the early 1840s it had added 222 churches, largely through public subscription. When theGreat Disruption occurred in 1843, and roughly a third of ministers and their congregations left the established church and its buildings to form theFree Church of Scotland, Chalmers' organisational skills helped the Free Church build over 700 new places of worship by 1847. The established church took time to recover, but embarked on a rival programme of church building, increasing its number of parishes from 924 in 1843 to 1,437 by 1909.[31] The intense competition between different denominations led to the creation of grand churches with tall steeples and ultimately resulted in an oversupply of churches, which would be a financial burden to future generations.[32]
The intense competition for congregations also led to changes to make worship more attractive that were reflected in architecture.[32] The Church of Scotland was among the first European Protestant churches to engage in liturgical innovation reflected in seating arrangements, abandoningbox pews for open benches. From the middle of the nineteenth century some of its churches, likeGreyfriars in Edinburgh, began installing organs and stained glass windows, reflecting an attempt to return to forms of worship largely excluded since the late seventeenth century. AtDuns the church was rebuilt (opened 1888) in a plan used in the Middle Ages, with a separate chancel, communion table at the far end, and the pulpit under the chancel arch. The influence of theecclesiological movement can be seen in churches built atCrathie (opened 1893), which had anapsidal chancel raised above the level of the nave, a stone pulpit and a brass lectern, andSt. Cuthbert's, Edinburgh (rebuilt 1894), with a marble communion table in a chancel decorated with marble and mosaic.[33]

A sub-set of the Medieval revival wereNeo-Romanesque churches, often called "Norman" at the time, built in a style that incorporated Romanesque,Byzantine andAnglo-Saxon features within a low-massive framework. These were utilised by all the major denominations. Examples include the Church of Scotland buildings atErrol (1831–33); the Catholic St. Anthony's Chapel,Murthly (1845); McBridge Free Church,Rothsay (1845); and the Episcopalian St. Thomas, Rutland Place, Edinburgh (1842–43).[34] Later nineteenth-century examples included the church atStrathbungo (1873), and St. Ninian's,Cathcart Road (1888), Glasgow, both designed by W. G. Rowan.[35]
The Gothic style developed fully in the later nineteenth century.[30] Important figures includedFrederick Thomas Pilkington (1832–98), who adapted the Gothic style for the needs of the Free Church of Scotland, as atBarclay Viewforth Church, Edinburgh (1862–64).[36]Robert Rowand Anderson (1834–1921), trained in the office of leading Gothic ArchitectGeorge Gilbert Scott in London before returning to Edinburgh, where he worked on many small churches, including St James the Less inLeith, Christ Church,Falkirk (1862) and theCatholic Apostolic Church in Edinburgh (1876). He also supervised the renovation ofDunblane (1890–93) andPaisley Abbey (1898–1907).[37]Alexander "Greek" Thomson (1817–75), working mainly in Glasgow, began in the Gothic style, but soon turned toward the ancient Greeks and Egyptians for inspiration, as can be seen in the temple and columns that were part of theCaledonia Road Church (1856).[36] Scotland's most influential architect of the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century,Charles Rennie MacKintosh, designed a number of churches, but only one,Queen's Cross Free Church, Glasgow (1898–99) was built. It avoided the characteristic steeple of Glasgow churches in favour of a wide tower, and has a simple, elegant, rectangular structure with a single aisle.[38]
In the first half of the twentieth century, there continued to be isolated examples of Gothic church building, including L. G. Thomson'sReid Memorial Church, Edinburgh (1929–33) and J. Taylor Thomson'sSt John Renfield Church, Glasgow (1927–31). The most common forms in this period were plain and massive Neo-Romanesque buildings. Protestant examples included H. O. Tarbolton'sBangour Village Church (1924–30) and L. G. Thomson'sFairmilehead Church (1937). Roman Catholic examples includedReginald Fairlie's Immaculate Conception Church,Fort William (1933–34), and Archibald Macpherson's St Matthew,Rosewell (completed 1926).[39]

The reunification of the Church of Scotland in 1929 removed much of the need for new Presbyterian church-building, which was replaced by a tendency towards renovating nineteenth-century churches, toning-down ritualistic furnishings; replacing dark varnish by white or neutral colour schemes. The main tendency in church design in the 1930s was a move towards classicism. There were isolated large classical Protestant commissions, such as Bristo Baptist Church, Edinburgh (1933–35), but the major buildings in this form were in the Catholic Church where there was a movement towards worshipper-centred basilican plans, after the pontificate ofPius X (1903–14). This movement reached its peak in the 1960s after theSecond Vatican Council.[39]
The leading figure in pursuing this style was Giacomo Antonio (Jack) Coia, who after the deaths of his partners, was the sole heir to the Glasgow-based practice ofGillespie, Kidd & Coia. From the later 1920s he pursued a brick style of Catholic architecture, pioneered by Macpherson in Edinburgh and combined with the classical tendencies of Fairlie's refacing ofSt Patrick's, Cowgate (1928–29). Coia's first church, St Anne's,Dennistoun (1931), utilised the engineering techniques ofBeaux-Arts architecture, resulting in a broad, centralised space, with narrow arcades rather than aisles, with a monumental facade of red-brick. He used a more linear plan in subsequent designs, including St Patrick,Greenock (1934–35), St Columba,Maryhill (1937), and St Columbkille,Rutherglen (1934–40). The early Christian and Byzantine character of the most striking of these, St Patrick's, was enhanced by carvings byArchibald Dawson. Coia's use of selective details was probably indebted to Mackintosh. Later in the decade Coia took into partnership T. Warnett Kennedy. Kennedy's temporary, open-roofed Catholic chapel at theEmpire Exhibition (1938) was fronted by a Mackintosh-like grid of metalwork, and with his St Peter in Chains Church,Ardrossan (1938), with austere walls and towers, showed the influence of the "abstract compositions" of contemporary Swedish architecture and pointed to the future influence of modernism.[40]

After the Second World War, there was another period of rapid church building, as the creation of new towns andcouncil house estates necessitated the rapid supply of new churches.[41] The austerity, shortage of materials and need for rapid building, discouraged the development of innovative design. This was accompanied by the rejection by most architects of traditional forms in favour of "international modernism", characterised by simple outlines, uncluttered internal spaces, absence of colour, and flat roofs.[42]
The Catholic Church, whose traditional membership was most affected by the changes in housing, was the first to react to this situation, creating 76 new parishes between 1845 and 1960 in the west of the country alone. The Baptist and Episcopalian churches followed close behind, particularly in the new towns.[41] Within the Church of Scotland, the closeness of congregation and clergy was expressed in the domestic plainness of 1950s dual-usehall churches, as at Reiach'sKildrum Parish Church,Cumbernauld (completed 1962), a steel framed building, clad in timber and brick with a flat roof.[43] Of 129 buildings erected by the Church of Scotland between 1948 and 1959, 108 were on this basic pattern.[41]
The influence of more radicalExpressionism andModernism can be seen in buildings such asBasil Spence'sMortonhall Crematorium, Edinburgh (1964–67), with a series of irregular chapels, with smooth-faced blockwork and Wheeler & Sproson's Boghall Church,Bathgate (1965), influenced by Beaux-Arts architecture.[43] The pioneering contribution from the Church of Scotland was St. Columbia's, Glenrothes (1960), which had seating for the congregation on three sides of a central platform, with the choir and elders on the fourth side behind the pulpit.[44]

In the Roman Catholic Church, the most important steps towards anexpressionist design were under taken by Gillespie, Kidd & Coia. This began with St Paul's Church in the new town ofGlenrothes (1956–57). This was a wedge-shaped construction of white-painted common brick focused on a dramatic, jagged metal cross by the sculptorBenno Schotz. From about 1960, all Gillespie, Kidd & Coia's churches were designed in thisLate Modernist style, as at St Bride's,East Kilbride (1963–64), which had a rectangular plan. From the mid-1960s, they adopted a centralised, non-rectangular plan, with seating ranged round the altar, reflecting liturgical change. Sacred Heart Church,Cumbernauld (1964), was rectangular, of load-bearing brick, dramatically lit through dark coloured windows. Our Lady of Good Counsel,Dennistoun (1965) had a splayed plan and slanted ceiling. St Benedict Drumchapel (1965–67) had a prow-like roof on curved, laminated timbers. These innovative designs inspired others to experiment, including J. McCarron's Our Lady of Sorrows,South Uist (1964–65). However, many of these designs proved too radical and were later demolished by the Catholic Church, citing structural or maintenance problems.[45]
The end of this phase of church-building, as the production of new housing subsided in the 1970s, saw a return to conservatism in church design, which may have reflected a loss of confidence in the churches as attendances rapidly declined.[42] M. Glendinning, R. MacInnes and A. MacKechnie have identified a "post-Coia" style emerging in this period.[46] The limited building, some replacing existing churches, tended to be by building companies using laminated timber beams, exposed brickwork and pyramidal roofs to produce utilitarian, if aesthetically unadventurous, constructions.[42] From the late 1980s there were some original designs, including St Mary the Virgin, inPort Glasgow (1984) by Frank Burnet, Bell and Partners; St Anthony's Catholic church inKirriemuir (1987), by James F. Stephen Architects; and the replacement church at St Joseph's Catholic Church,Faifley (1997) by Jacobsen and French.[42] There was also thepostmodern design of St John Ogilvie Catholic Church,Irvine (1982),[46] and the nearbyGirdle Toll parish church, converted from a farmhouse (1992).[42]