Today, it is maintained by the Richmond Historical Society and is open to the public during the summer and early fall.
It is a two-story wood-frame structure with sixteen sides, finished with wooden clapboards and modest Federal period styling.
Rhodes adapted the conventional meeting house to this distinctive form, borrowing at least some details from architectural pattern books using a panel from Asher Benjamin's 1797 Public Builder's Assistant for the styling of the pulpit.
The construction was funded by the sale of pews, most of which were purchased by Congregationalists, but at least four other Christian denominations were represented.
This restoration reversed major alterations made since its original construction (including, for example, the removal of a stairway to the attic), the careful reconstruction of the tower using similar materials (due to extensive rot in the original), and a sympathetic reframing of the roof.