In 1960 when it was still a village, Pevsner noted that the manor house, almshouses and church were part of a vista that unfolded gradually. Today they are still isolated, despite being on the northern edge of Milton Keynes, but the two first named buildings now form part of an Arts Centre with studios, gallery space and a café. The church is on the N edge of this group, and consists of a tall clerestoried nave with a S aisle and N and S doorways under porches, the former contiguous with a N chapel, the latter projecting; a W tower of three storeys with an embattled parapet and a W doorway; and a chancel with a modern N vestry, and a S priests’ doorway. The oldest part is the tower, whose doorway and 2nd-storey windows appear to be 12thc (but see Comments below). The arch to the nave was replaced c1300, diagonal buttresses were added in the 15thc and the top storey in the 18thc. Excavations revealed that there was a smaller 12thc nave and chancel, and a 12thc S aisle, but nothing of these stands above the ground. The present nave is 13thc with a 14thc S arcade, and N chapel. The clerestory was probably added in the 15thc, although it now has 18thc windows. The chancel was also rebuilt in the 18thc and many windows were replaced at that time. Romanesque features described here are the W tower doorway and the 2nd-storey tower windows.