The site is surrounded by an ornate fence, and the synagogue has a winter hall and offices.
The eclectic Romanesque Revival building, considered by some to be exaggerated, was the third synagogue of Baumhorn and bears his creative Italian study tour and the influence of Ödön Lechner.
[3] Above the central floor plan was a dome, which, together with its ornaments, is a direct descendant of the style of the Budapest Museum of Applied Arts.
The dome is underpinned by columnar columns and the interior is surrounded by a female gallery.
In front of the eastern wall, the pedestal and the ornately shaped crib were once separated by a cast-iron fence.