[1] This was carried out in 1869–70, and the architect responsible for supervising the move and restoring the chapel to its present form was almost certainly E. W. Pugin, who had designed the convent.
The entrance is through a porch in the north end, its door facing east, and the west wall is attached to the convent.
However evidence, including before-and-after photographs, show that the form of the present chapel differs from the original; it was not merely dismantled and reconstructed on the new site.
[1] The single-cell interior contains a small chancel and a recess in the west wall leading into the convent.
[4] After years of abandonment, the convent was finally converted into residential units and the nuns chapel broken up into flats.
The chapel is available for hire for concerts, meetings and small scale events during the warmer months and occasional services are held.