The first planting of this monument, which would become a church in 1950, was initially made to have a function as a crematorium and can refer with extreme certainty, to 1897. The transformation should have taken place around 1950, raising the structure of the crematorium chimney to make the small bell tower. The building, in its new and present plan, consists of three naves: the central one ends in the north with a small polygonal apse. The facade is characterized by a high pronaos, accessed by a short flight of steps, marked by two columns of local granite on which the gable rests. The load-bearing structure of the building was made of different materials: brick, used to delimit the openings, locally sourced schist in the structures in the subject of cornices, and granite for the construction of the pronaos. On all masonry, the binder used is cementitious type.