The vestibule has windows to the north and south, and is separated from the nave by a semicircular wall resting on two supports.
The nave and vestibule windows are narrow, arched and covered in metal grilles; they are a meter high, and set some 3.5 m from ground level.
The western wall of the porch has lists of all the village's soldiers killed during World War I and II.
The altar walls are covered in wood; in the nave, with white hexagonal and pentagonal alabaster; in the vestibule and porch, with plaques of quarried stone.
Located above the door, it depicts Stephen and his wife Maria Voichița between his sons Alexandru and Bogdan.
She wears a green Byzantine costume with a wool coat on top, reaching from her shoulders to her feet.
A 1988 renovation involved removing the roof and raising the wall, thus restoring the original style, lost during the 1902 repairs.
[4] The monastery complex is listed as a historic monument by Romania's Ministry of Culture and Religious Affairs.
Five components are given separate entries: the church; the palace, cellar and refectory ruins; the bell tower; the watchtower; and the defensive wall.