Coanwood Friends Meeting House is a single-storey building built on a
plinth. Its plan is rectangular, measuring long by wide. It is constructed in squared stone in four
bays with
rusticated quoins and dressings. The roof has
eaves of stone flags with slates above, and a stone ridge. There are fixed 12-pane windows in the two left (western) bays and in the bay on the right. Between them, in the third bay, are three steps leading up to a rectangular doorway. The
lintel over the door is inscribed with the date 1760. The left and right sides are plain with
gables and in the back wall is a 16-pane
sash window. Attached to the right wall is a
lean-to earth closet with a stone-slate roof. The interior is divided into two rooms by a partition containing top-hinged
shutters to the right of the entrance. The larger room on the left has a stone-flagged floor, and contains simple wooden benches. There is a central
aisle with seven rows of open-backed benches facing to the west. Opposite these and facing them are two rows of benches on a
dais; these are sometimes called
elders' benches. The benches form "a rare survival of the historic Quaker layout". The smaller room contains a fireplace and a grate with an iron hob. The meeting house stands in a graveyard that contains "typical Quaker gravestones", many of which commemorate members of the Wigham family. ==Present day==