The mosque measures and was built from
limestone and
sandstone. Arranged around the courtyard are a prayer room to the east, an
iwan to the south, a
minaret, and on the north side are a library and a burial room containing al-Thafer Damri's tomb. The entrance on the north side dates from the mosque's establishment in 1360, and in the late 20th century was one of the best preserved entrances from the Mamluk period in Gaza. The inscription dating the mosque's construction is above the door. Above this are decorative fields of trefoil patterns and geometric shapes. Several
iwans were added during the mosque's reconstruction after the First World War. By the 1990s only one of the
iwans, the one the south side, survived – it likely dated to the Mamluk period. The prayer room is connected to the courtyard by two doors. This access method route to the courtyard rather than using an arcade may have been developed in Syria. The style is used at other mosques in Gaza such as the 13th-century al-Agami mosque. ==See also==