Church of St Mark, Broomhill, Sheffield

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Church of St Mark
Church of St Mark, Broomhill, Sheffield (Sheffield)
Church of St Mark, Broomhill, Sheffield
Shown within Sheffield
Basic information
Location Broomhill
South Yorkshire, England
Geographic coordinates 53°22′39″N 1°29′43″W / 53.3775, -1.4953Coordinates: 53°22′39″N 1°29′43″W / 53.3775, -1.4953
Religious affiliation Anglican
District Diocese of Sheffield
Website http://www.stmarkssheffield.co.uk
Architectural description
Architect(s) W. H. Crossland, George Pace
Architectural type Church
Architectural style Gothic revival/Modern
Year completed 1871; 1963
Specifications

St Mark's Church, Broomhill is the parish church of the Sheffield suburb of Broomhill, in England.

The church was originally built in 1868–1871 to a standard neo-Gothic design by W. H. Crossland. This building was destroyed by an incendiary bomb during the "Sheffield Blitz" of 12 December 1940, only the spire and a porch survived (they are now Grade II listed structures). The remnants of the bombed church were used as the basis for a new church designed by George Pace and constructed 1958–1963. This new building is of a Modernist design but is also sympathetic to the Gothic spire and porch. It is a rubble-faced concrete building with striking slit windows of varying numbers and locations around the building. There are also two notable stained glass windows: the Te Deum window by Harry Stammers and the west window by John Piper and Patrick Reyntiens.

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