Given to the Lorrainers by Pope Gregory XV in 1622, the pre-existing church of St. Nicholas was redesigned by Lorrainer architect François Desjardins (also called "Du Jardin" and italianized in "Francesco Giardini"), in 1632.
The architecture of the interior is characterized by a quite sober but evident baroque style with decorative effects based on the use of white and pink marbles.
Many frescoes and paintings by Lorrainer painters of the 17th and 18th centuries also decorate the interior.
In particular, two works by François Nicolas de Bar [fr]: "Saint Catherine" and "The Visitation".
In 1731, Corrado Giaquinto was commissioned to execute the frescoes: "Saint Nicholas water gush from cliff", "The three Theologic Virtues", "The three Cardinal Virtues" and in the cupola "The Paradise".