Situated at the corner of Hale and Chippendall Streets, Christ Church and its
spire are still a visible and distinctive presence in the surrounding area, which is now occupied by light industry rather than residential buildings. However, the neighbouring
Lang Park Stadium dominates the built environment. The church precinct is separated from the Hale Street diversion by a high retaining wall. An open garden area lies between the church and rectory and the memorial reserve is accessed from there by a gate set in a wall. The church grounds retain some mature trees. The church is a timber building, set on a low base of concrete blocks. It is
cruciform in plan with a slender spire over the crossing. The roof is clad with diamond shaped asbestos cement tiles and the pitch breaks to cover the verandahs on either side. There is a polygonal timber
baptistery. The building displays to great advantage the beauty and utility of Queensland timber. The exterior is clad with painted
weatherboard except for the outside walls to the
verandahs which have exposed studs. Inside, the church is lined with unpainted vee-jointed pine boards which have deepened in colour with age. It has a
crown post roof with scissor braces. The
transepts contain a
Lady Chapel and Warrior's Chapel and are separated from the
nave by pointed arches. The windows in the body of the church are
casements with
trefoil heads in moulded frames and are set with clear glass, but a group of seven above the altar are set with stained glass depicting
Christ and the saints
Paul,
Mary,
John, and
Barnabas. The baptistery beyond an arch at the southern end of the building is lit by modern
stained glass windows. A number of fittings reused from the earlier church include a stone font given by Andrew Petrie in 1874 to the first chapel. There is a brass
lectern donated as a memorial in 1892 and the
pulpit dates from 1914.
Pews in the
choir and nave are carved and add to the rich timber colours of the interior. There is a timber Honour Board from
World War I. The small
pipe organ by
Whitehouse to the right of the
chancel was extensively rebuilt and electrified in 1984. The rectory is no longer used for this purpose, although the church uses several rooms on the enclosed verandah facing the street as offices. The body of the house is let as a residence. It is a single-storey timber house with a steeply pitched roof, clad in
corrugated iron and decorated with
fretted barge boards. It is on low stumps and has brick
chimneys. A central hall opens into a dining and living rooms on the left and two bedrooms on the right. At the rear there is a kitchen wing containing
scullery, maid's room and kitchen. The house has lath and plaster walls in the main internal rooms, an unusual feature in a comparatively modest home. The verandah has been enclosed and extended over time; however, the house is generally very intact and has well-detailed
joinery. Details such as the arched timber front demonstrate the influence of the Gothic style. The Memorial Reserve contains 21 memorials from the former Anglican burial reserve, a number of which commemorate members of well known pioneer families. == Heritage listing ==