This red brick, rectangular-shaped Catholic church in the historicist style was built in 1854. Although a bell tower was planned separately, it was never constructed. A distinctive two-tiered openwork tower above the front façade and elegant stained-glass windows adorn the church. The roof, originally covered with Dutch tiles, is now replaced with red-painted galvanized sheet metal. In front of the main entrance, on the right side, stands a statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary on a high pedestal.
Inside the presbytery are two stained-glass windows—one depicting St. Augustine and the other St. Elizabeth. The church has three altars, all decorated with sculptures: the main altar is dedicated to the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, while the side altars honor the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Blessed Virgin Mary. The main altar features a wooden crucifix flanked by statues of the Virgin Mary, St. Peter, and St. Paul. The sculptor remains unknown.
The wooden pulpit is in Gothic style, with bas-reliefs of the four Evangelists and the Ten Commandments.