Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral

    4.0 (13 reviews)
    Open 7:30 am - 6:00 pm

    Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral Churches Photos

    Recommended Reviews - Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral

    Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
    Yelp app icon
    Browse more easily on the app
    Review Feed Illustration

    Reviews With Photos

    Picture from www.liverpoolmetrocathedral.org.uk
    Ruth B.

    The Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King is situated on the high ridge of Mount Pleasant, 10 minutes walk from Lime Street Station, and visible from most parts of the city. The cathedral is Mother Church to the Catholics of the whole Archdiocese of Liverpool, stretching from Ribble to Mersey. Similar to the Liverpool Anglican Cathedral in that it has a lot to offer and see, although I must say I do prefer Liverpool Anglican Cathedral - its sheer beauty continues to knock me over. Inside the Metropolitan Cathedral there are lots of chapels including the Chapel of Unity and Chapel of St Columba. The Cathedral is free to enter, although there is a crypt that has a fee of £3. The crypt is one of the largest in the world and worth a visit.

    Inside the Cathedral
    Liam M.

    As a lapsed Catholic it was an odd feeling to walk up the long,broad steps to the metropolitan catholic cathedral.It is such a collosus of a figure in Liverpools structure and a place which represents so much for so many. However when you enter the building and witness the enormous extravagant space inside there is a sense of calm which simply comes washing over you. It feels harmonious and peaceful exactly how a place of worship should do, except few are as awe inspiring as the cathedral. There are extravagant pieces on the sides of the wall which signal the stations of the cross and there are also beautifully decorated side chapels some of which are places of silent prayer and reflections where candles an be lit for a small fee. These side chapels pop out at you in a beautifully surprising manner as you slowly wander around the massive space and try your best to take it all in,although this is a difficult task at times as there is so much to try and capture. The main catholic day of prayer is Sunday and this is marked by the cathedral with four services between 8:30 am and 7:00 pm with a special family mass and also a solemn service. This is extreme dedication on the part of the cathedral as large numbers flood through the doors and yet the place remains a harmonious haven for those of a religous persuasion.The amount of services and the long opening hours of the cathedral make it feel a very accessible space and one where someone with faith could truly feel close to God. Despite its' size it still manages to retain a personal atmosphere which is not easily done. Although the cathedral is free to enter at all times there are specialist tours of Lutyens crypt with the prices starting at £3.00 for single admission,£8.00 for a family ticket and school parties are charged at £2.00 per person. It is an excellent level of value to be able to see one of the largest cathedral crypts in the world which has a strange but beautiful feel to it. Overall the cathedral is vast but beautiful and is a definite must see for those who are religous and even those of an atheist persuasion.There is also a gift shop which has various religous monuments and post cards with beautifully taken shots of the cathedral. There is also a cathedral piazza serving classy food as well as wines,beers and coffees which is a pleasantly upmarket touch and something well worth doing if you are visiting this monumental place. The Metropolitan Catholic Cathedral will leave you feeling nothing short of inspired.

    See all

    Photo of Richard F.
    153
    2661
    11705

    9 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Philip S.
    18
    614
    653

    16 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Anthony S.
    5
    538
    498

    16 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    17 years ago

    Helpful 3
    Thanks 0
    Love this 3
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Rebecca C.
    9
    270
    289

    16 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Dave L.
    34
    563
    650

    16 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Helen T.
    21
    315
    328

    16 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Ruth B.
    13
    392
    546

    16 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Liam M.
    5
    659
    547

    16 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    12 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0
    Photo of Megan C.
    3
    922
    667

    16 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    11 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    12 years ago

    Helpful 0
    Thanks 0
    Love this 0
    Oh no 0

    Review Highlights - Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral

    Known as Paddy's Wigwam (have a guess why) this is the more modern of the two cathedrals at either end of the same street.

    Mentioned in 4 reviews

    Read more highlights

    Verify this business for free

    Get access to customer & competitor insights.

    Verify this business

    St Luke's Church

    St Luke's Church

    4.2(19 reviews)
    0.4 mi

    I cannot believe I found this place. Seriously, this was one of the most pleasant surprises of my…read moreLiverpool trip. We were just walking from our hostel to the city center to find a nice spot to have a drink, it was about 8pm, and most of the city looked empty (which we thought it was very strange). From out of nowhere we see this church-like building but it seems like there is a music, perhaps a movie soundtrack coming out of it. Oh wait, are those lights? It was so intriguing and confusing we decided to walk in and see for ourselves. OMG, this exists? A church that lost their ceiling and they know use it to host open-air movie sessions, concerts and exhibitions? But how is the ceiling gone but the walls are intact. We were so impressed that took mental notes from the place and went to research about it later. We found out the St Luke's Church was built in the early 1800's but it was damaged and remains roofless since the Liverpool Blitz in 1941. The place is really interesting and if you are more courageous (or lucky) than we were you will be able to spend a couple of hours here enjoying a nice cultural activity, but since it was about -2º we decided to walk some place warmer - maybe next time.

    St Luke's is a prominent landmark in central Liverpool, situated at the entrance to Liverpool's…read moreChinatown, it's Gothic architecture looking somewhat incongruous next to the Chinese gateway close by. The strong perpendicular lines are softened by a small garden and trees and bushes around the site, not to say an impressive wall with Gothic detailing. The church was designed by John Foster, and although work commenced in 1802, it was not consecrated until 1831, the final work having been carried out by his son. The style is a florid but striking Perpendicular Gothic, with elaborate pinnacles on the nave buttresses, and octagonal pinnacles rising above the chancel. Both church and the surrounding walls are Grade II* listed buildings. But it's not until you get up close that you realise that the church is just a shell, a victim of a fire-bomb in an air-raid on 5th May 1941. Never fully repaired, the walls are intact, but roofless and windowless. The site is still consecrated as a church, and the venue for various arts events, but in the main it stands as a sort of unofficial war memorial to the estimated 2,500 who lost their lives in the 1941 Liverpool Blitz.

    Photos
    St Luke's Church - Night frontal view, up close.

    Night frontal view, up close.

    St Luke's Church - Outside

    Outside

    St Luke's Church - Majestic exterior.

    See all

    Majestic exterior.

    Liverpool Cathedral - Grand!

    Liverpool Cathedral

    4.5(32 reviews)
    0.6 mi

    This cathedral is impressive but I can't say that I like the exterior of the building, in fact I…read morehate it and find it ugly and quite creepy but the interior is beautiful, it's huge, booming, with large stained glass windows, marble floors, a gorgeous gold alter and religious artwork on display. It is beautiful inside and well worth a visit.

    Although only completed in the 1970s, Liverpool's Anglican Cathedral is one Britain's most iconic…read morebuildings, a place of superlatives. A visit is a must on any stay in Liverpool. The cathedral is simply vast, and impresses in scale if nothing else, the height emphasised inside by the dark stone: some find this overbearing, other magnificent. Either way, it certainly makes an impression. Despite the late-Gothic style, this is entirely a 20th-century building. The diocese of Liverpool was created in 1880, but it was not until 1902 that a competition was held to design a cathedral in keeping with the wealthy and burgeoning port. Amazingly, the winner was just 22 years old, and still a student with no other buildings to his credit. But this was no ordinary student: Giles Gilbert Scott was the grandson of Sir George Gilbert Scott, the great Victorian church designer, and his father (also George Gilbert Scott) was also a church architect. Due to his inexperience, one of the competition assessors, G K Bodley, himself a well-known church architect, was appointed to work alongside him. The relationship was reportedly difficult, but after Bodley's death in 1907, Scott continued alone. Scott's design was for a huge, late gothic church, which would dominate the hill-top site chosen. The plan is conventional, albeit with double transepts, and the floor rises through a series of steps from the west door to emphasise the height. The first part of the church to be built was the Lady Chapel, completed in 1910, using traditional church building techniques in stone. As the cathedral slowly developed, Scott modified the plans, which replaced the twin west towers with a single central tower, and also simplified the gothic detailing. The contrast between the more intricate and delicate style of the Lady Chapel and the more monumental style of the rest of the cathedral is noticeable. Another change was the adoption of reinforced concrete for the structure, clad in red sandstone, rather than continue using the traditional building techniques. The choir and eastern transepts were completed in 1924, and the cathedral consecrated in the presence of King George V. But rising costs, the 1930s' depression and the two World Wars hampered progress, and the cathedral was not finally completed until 1978, and a special service held in the presence of Queen Elizabeth II. It is the largest church in the UK and vies with St John the Divine in New York to be the largest Anglican church: it is the third largest in Europe after St Peter's in Rome and Seville cathedral, although it may be larger in volume. Its 101m (331ft) bell-tower is the largest (though not quite the highest) in the world, with the heaviest and highest peal of bells too. The central space under the tower (53m, 175ft) was also the highest until a recent clutch of skyscrapers were built with higher atria. But at 50m (161ft) it's still impressive. The organ, with 10,268 pipes, is the largest in the UK, and the largest operational organ in the world. The cathedral also has an active life of services, education, music and events to match its size, and is one of the most vibrant in the UK. A visit to a service to hear the sound of the magnificent organ reverberating through the interior is a truly memorable experience. The other amazing experience is to ascend the tower: 2 lifts take you most of the way, but the final ascent is by 108 stairs. Thanks to its dominant position on St James' Mount, the top is over 500ft above the River Mersey, and the views across Liverpool, the Wirral and Cheshire are stupendous. There no doubt about it - this is a must see building.

    Photos
    Liverpool Cathedral
    Liverpool Cathedral
    Liverpool Cathedral - This is a very beautiful "side wing."

    See all

    This is a very beautiful "side wing."

    St Philip Neri

    St Philip Neri

    5.0(3 reviews)
    0.4 mi

    This is a GORGEOUS church. Where do I start? The beautiful gardens? The ornate architecture? It…read moremight be little but what it lacks in size it makes up for in sheer eye candy. Incorporating carvings of the Madonna with child, Christ and a life-size Last Supper, this is a visual spectacle. Catharine Street is a very picturesque little area, and this church is home to the Liverpool universities' Roman Catholic Chaplaincy. Built somewhere between 1914 and 1920, the focus here is on sculpture and the name 'Saint Neri' came from Philip Neri having founded the original Oratory church in Rome. It's a Grade II listed building and recently obtained a grant amounting to £72,000 for the purpose of repairing water damage to the stunning mosaic tiles. You must explore the garden if you get a chance, it's been so beautifully done. The whole thing is a treat for the sentences and so very cute you might well sigh.

    Despite being named after a man who sounded like the most odious kind of estate agent, the church…read moreof St Philip Neri is a surprising nook of exotic tranquility that sits on Catherine Street surrounded by mansions of Georgian splendour. A huge brick representation of the Last Supper dominates the facade of the building, but inside the atmosphere is much cooler, both in temperature and in the way the Fonz would use it. To the right of the main entrance is a tiny chapel of blue mosaic tiles, where the light spilling through the little window gives the impression you're underwater, preferably somewhere in the tropics. It may just be the most relaxing place I've ever stood. Outside, the gardens (or El Jardin della Nuestra Senora) feel strangely foreign, like the kind of serene place in Greece or Italy you'd stroll around amid the buzz of cicadas. It's just a shame you can see English traffic grumbling past.

    Photos
    St Philip Neri
    St Philip Neri
    St Philip Neri

    See all

    St Nicholas Church Gardens

    St Nicholas Church Gardens

    4.8(4 reviews)
    1.1 mi

    St Nicholas' Church couldn't be anything other than 'The Sailor's Church'. Although mere feet from…read moreoffices crammed with PCs and juddering printers, stepping into the gardens here is like stepping into a hardier, more windswept corner of the city. Seagulls whirl and screech overhead and the wind comes whipping into your eyes from across the river. Until 1767, when Georges Dock was built (now crushed beneath the Liver Building), the tide used to lap against the churchyard's outer wall, a spot now occupied by the thundering traffic of the Strand. In 1849, it was closed to burials and now stands as a windswept patch of grass to suddenly find yourself on during bleak afternoons.

    If you want to see the Docks and the Liver Buildings from a different perspective then this little…read morechurch garden is a great space to come and reflect, on a lunch break or when you have a spare second. The views are magnificent with a clash of the old and the new on the skyline. St Nicholas is the Saint of Sailors (ahoy there!) and from its foundations up it is a beautiful piece of architecture which has been around one way or another since medieval times. Apparently, pre-Liver Buildings (can you imagine the Liverpool skyline without it?) before a Dock was built the Mersey waters used to lap against the wall surrounding the garden at high-tide! They also have a statue dedicated to the victims of the Blitz here which is worth seeing. I discovered this place at sunset... the sun setting the buildings aflame with an orange glow. It's a great time to see the city from here.

    Photos
    St Nicholas Church Gardens
    St Nicholas Church Gardens
    St Nicholas Church Gardens

    See all

    Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral - churches - Updated May 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...