This is a small brick church, now rough-cast and
limewashed. Seen framed by spreading figs from the road approaching Cleveland Point, it is a simple
gothic buttressed form with a heavier polygonal
porch. An octagonal
spire stands on the southwest end of the ridge of a steep
gabled roof, clad in
asbestos cement slates. The spire, with
pinnacle clad in smaller slates, has a
lancet louvered vent to each face. All windows in the original church and chancel are lancet shaped. There are four tall windows each side of the
nave. The northeast chancel, attached under a smaller
gable, is end-lit by three
stained glass windows. A smaller window is placed under the main gable, centrally above the chancel roof. In the southwest wall there are windows either side of the porch, and a smaller one, central above the porch roof. The porch, in rendered concrete, has more elaborate stepped buttresses, a hardboard ceiling and a concrete floor. A rectangular window, facing southwest, incorporates a pair of dominant lancet panes. The position of the former
vestry roof, on the southeast, is indicated by marks on the external render. A timber door leading from the church to the former vestry has been removed and the opening brick-filled and rendered. Internally, moulded timber
trusses span a nave of four
bays. Moulded plaster surrounds frame the
chancel arch. Walls are of white-washed plaster, with recent varnished vertical boarding around the walls of the nave. The ceiling is of beaded
tongue and groove boarding. The stone font, now painted, stands outside in a paved area, with low garden walls and planting contemporary with the adjacent 1980s church. == Heritage listing ==