It is a single-story Mission style building, designed by noted Arkansas architect John Parks Almand and completed in 1919.
Characteristics of the Mission style include the low-pitch tile hip roof, overhanging eaves with exposed rafter ends, and smooth plaster walls.
The building also has modest Classical features, found in pilaster capitals and medallions of plaster and terra cotta.
That congregation has since severed its association with the Evangelical Methodist movement, and is now known as the Little Rock Community Church.
[3] The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984,[1] and was included in a 1988 expansion of the Governor's Mansion Historic District.