Shortly afterwards he designed the Church of St Michael and All Angels, Northenden (1936–37), which well illustrates his absorption of "Continental experiments.
"[6] From the 1930s Cachemaille-Day became known for his churches, some of which are the most innovative ecclesiastical buildings of their time.
He was one of the leading English architects to embrace the Liturgical Movement.
The interior of St Barnabas, on Stroud Road, Gloucester, built at the foot of the Cotswolds in an estate south of the city, distills Gothic architecture into pure, simple gestures of interchanging arches within a huge hall church: the energy and dance of the Gothic is at the heart of this design, setting up a majestic yet lively space, its scale suggesting the ambition of a cathedral builder.
[citation needed] St Edmund, Chingford, built in 1938, is Grade II listed.