According to studies, the mausoleum was almost square (jam) in shape, the internal dimensions were 4.47x4.40 m. The walls were made of 21x21x2.5 cm small baked bricks with the help of ganchkhok.
[1] On both sides of the entrance (southern wall) of the Mir Said Bahram mausoleum, octagonal pillars of baked brick measuring 21x21x2.5 cm were raised.
These checkerboard ornaments include a wide, relief arch with intersecting meanders and squares joined by lines.
On the eastern side of the mausoleum was the Mir-Sayid Bakhrom Mosque (now there is part of the park and flat land in place of it).
In 1985–1990, a children's amusement park was built on the south and east sides of the Mir-Sayid Bakhrom mausoleum (in place of the destroyed mosque).
[6] In the first half of the 20th century, when Soviet archaeologists organized expeditions in Karmana and began to study historical structures, the facade of Mir-Sayid Bakhrom's mausoleum was plastered beyond recognition, one side was covered with porches connected to the mosque, and only the northern and western walls were visible from the outside.
[4] In 1934, the members of the Zarafshan archaeological expedition conducted research in the tomb of Mir-Sayid Bakhrom, but mistakenly they included it among the structures of the later period.
Expedition member Vasily Shishkin drew a schematic drawing of the embossed pattern of the building in his diary.