The church (in a simple wooden structure) was present in Asmara since the late 19th century. In the early 1930s, the Italian governor of Asmara ordered to create an improved structure with modern building materials and under the supervision of Italian architects. In its present rationalist/modernist style, the church dates from 1938, when an unknown Italian architect, The 1920 form has also been attributed to Odoardo Cavagnari, who designed
Asmara Theatre and Asmara's futuristic
Fiat Tagliero service station, and who was Asmara's Chief of Public Works. Both the central block and the two large freestanding square towers that flank it are built in alternate layers of brick and stone, emulating the layers of wood and stone of
Aksumite architecture, a technique that has been for centuries in use in the
Eritrean Highlands. The protruding wooden support beams in these structures have been named "monkey heads". == Earlier forms ==