It is historically significant because it is a John Gaw Meem "
Santa Fe Style" church building, built north of the
San Luis Valley. The pueblo chapel is surrounded by a walled courtyard near a ravine in the Ponderosa pine forest. It appears much as it had when originally built with
stuccoed walls, log
vigas, a bell from "an old mission church in New Mexico". The two-storied building is entered through double carved wooden doors. It has an altar and north and south
transepts, each with side porches. Inside the church are a number of wood carvings features.
Eugenie Shonnard carved 20-foot
reredos of seven saints. Archways to the transepts "rough hewn wood carvings". The altar, pulpit, lectern, and other furnishings are made of carved wood, also by Shonnard. Above the log vigas is a herringbone pattern made of Aspen saplings. Flagstone is used for flooring. A spiral staircase is used to access the second story where there is additional seating.
Bainbridge Bunting wrote in his book, ‘’John Gaw Meem: Southwestern Architect:’’ The Taylor chapel, Meem’s first essay in the traditional church form, was commissioned in 1928 by Mrs. Alice B. Taylor. As in his early Spanish-Pueblo houses, the forms here ten to be more picturesque, the batter of the walls is exaggerated, and the profiles of the parapets self-consciously irregular. The woodwork is also elaborately carved, much more so than any that survives in a mission church. This is especially true of two interior doors leading to the “transepts.” These and the reredos were carved by Meem’s friend
Eugenie Shonnard... It reflects Taylor's values of piety and simplicity, "passion for Southwestern art", and with an "unparalleled view" of
Pikes Peak. ==La Foret==