Originally the manager's house, offices and stables for Ladyshore Colliery, later a private house, it is in stone with slate roofs and two storeys. The house has three bays, casement windows, a 20th-century porch, and a doorway with a four-centred arched head, a fanlight and a hood mould. The stable is recessed and has four bays. It has one casement window, the others being mullioned, a doorway with a fanlight, a datestone, and at the rear are lunettes and pitching holes.[2][3]
The church was designed by E. G. Paley in early Decorated style, and the tower was raised in height in 1924. It is built in stone with slate roofs, and consists of a nave, north and south transepts, a west porch, a chancel, a north vestry, and a tower at the southeast corner. The tower has four stages, with a stair turret at the southeast, a plain parapet and corner pinnacles. At the west end are large buttresses, a gabled porch, and a rose window.[2][9]
The plaque on the wall of the library has a rectangular plan, and is in sandstone with a frame and panels in Conistonslate. It consists of a carving in bas-relief depicting a dead soldier wrapped in a shroud, and the frame contains inscriptions and a coat of arms. At the ends of the plaque are panels with the names of those lost in the First World War. Below are two tablets added in 1950 with the names of those lost in the Second World War.[2][10]