This church had a sturdy saddle-roof tower until 1792. That year, the entire west end was rebuilt: a closed façade with a small round window and a wooden façade tower above it. In the south wall you’ll find the entrance, framed with pilasters and capitals. The windows in that wall look Romanesque, but they are from a later period. The bricked-up one is original. In the north wall, unusual rectangular windows were added.
Beneath the wooden barrel vault stands furnishings painted in a light ochre linden-wood imitation. The 19th-century pulpit, with bowl, backboard and sounding board, is finished with richly worked cornices. The elegant Rococo-style organ was taken over in 1908 from the Roman Catholic Sint-Laurenskerk in Haarlem.