The grave is in a chamber below ground level, accessed by stairs, and has been decorated by visitors as though it were a saint's shrine.
[3] The tomb is now in a semi-ruined state, lacking its decorations, though the main structure is intact.
This is in brick with a dome of 42 feet (13 m) in diameter above an octagonal drum with iwans on each side.
It would have been originally decorated with stone facings and inlays (kashi kari), and fresco paintings, some traces of which remain on the tomb.
[3] Near the railway track on the road is a sign board where "MET-1" is written, beyond which lies the gate through which people can access the tomb, through a passageway.