The building is a tall 1-1/2 story wood frame structure, with a front-facing gable roof, original clapboard siding, and a recent (2009) concrete foundation; the latter is the result of the building have been moved back from the road about 200 feet (61 m).
The main facade, facing the street, is symmetrical, with a double-door entrance at the center, with flanking pilasters and a triangular transom window that has a cornice above.
In the attic level above the entrance are a pair of pointed-arch windows, again beneath a single triangular cornice.
The building's interior retains all of its original hardware and fixtures, and provides two full stories, each with a large meeting space.
[2] The building was constructed in 1873, and is one of the state's best-preserved examples of a late 19th-century municipal hall.