[3] The church was described in the Nottingham Evening Post: It is a commanding structure, and an undoubted ornament to the town.
It has a nave of seven bays divided from aisles of slightly unequal width by iron columns, which support a semi-circular arcade and clerestory.
The galleries which run round the sides, and the circular end in Alfred-street provide 284 sittings.
A striking feature of the exterior is an octagonal tower, 100 feet high at the juncture of the four roads clock faces being placed on either side of the upper part.
A lobby connecting the two principal entrances is situate in Alfred-street, and no less than five new classrooms have been provided in connection with the schools, three of the old class-rooms having been enlarged and improved.After a period of decline in the mid 20th century, the church eventually closed, and was converted into a centre for the Pakistani League of Friends.