It features an altar separated from the nave by an iconostasis, a vestibule with a spire, and a small entrance porch to the west.
[1] The altar exterior has five sides and a semicircular interior, with three arched windows and two niches at the north and south.
[2] The second part mentions her parents; her father Petru came from Tarnovo, supervised the Greek merchants of Transylvania and lived at Orăștie in 1705.
The altar burned around 1800, and the iconostasis mentions a date of 1811; it was probably executed by an itinerant Serbian painter and his Aromanian assistant.
[1] The church is listed as a historic monument by Romania's Ministry of Culture and Religious Affairs.