[1] The church is made of yellow and pink sandstone and was built in the Romanesque and Gothic styles, with Neo-Gothic additions.
[1] Notre-Dame de l'Assomption suffered severe damage during the French Revolution and now appears relatively unadorned on both the outside and the inside.
The large-scale volume of the church and the presence of several medieval building styles appear all the more evidently to the visitor.
[1] A comprehensive restoration of the building, which was undertaken from 1866 by the French architect Maximilien Émile Mimey,[1] had to be stopped in 1870 because of the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War.
[4] Apart from the baptismal font, the tabernacle and the tombstone of the knight Werner Falk, all three in an ornate Gothic style, the rest of the interior furnishing is mainly Neo-Gothic.