The Saint Denys
district of Southampton is named after the
Augustinian
Priory, founded in 1127 of which little now remains.
The present church was built on a site close to the ancient priory by a
leading architect
in the gothic revival,
Sir
George Gilbert Scott, (1811-1878) whose other
projects included the St Pancras Railway Station in London.
The Nave, Chancel and North Aisle were built in 1867 and the South
Aisle added in 1889. The Vestry (now demolished) was built in 1896 and
partially re-erected to facilitate the recent development of the Church
Centre. Before the erection of this Church centre in 1997 the site
included a church hall that was built in 1910. This, together with a
pre-fabricated meetings room building, was demolished in 1996 and part
of the released site sold to a housing authority. The new Church Centre
incorporates material from the former Hall, including its timber
trusses, vestry (including a reconstructed Vestry gable elevation) and
windows from the Church/Vestry link corridor. These line the Church
Centre corridor alongside the inner garden court.
The main building is constructed in red bick with interior and exterior
stone dressings in a warm brown limestone that
originates from Bath.
Fragments of the Augustinian Priory of St Denys which was sited nearby
(near the north-east side of the junction between Priory Road and
Priory Close) survive in the church. These include encaustic tiles from
the Priory pavement and a stone coffin, said to date from the 12th to
13th century.