The church of Holy Great Martyr Demetrius of Thessaloniki with a bell tower is a landmark of wooden sacred architecture. The temple was built in 1856. It is one of the oldest architectural monuments on national importance that have survived until today. After the latest restoration carried out in 2017 the shrine was restored to its original appearance. The original building is an interesting architectural example of the masters of the Hutsul folk school. The temple is cruciform in plan, one-story with shortened side arms. The church composition is dominated by a square in plan log house, which is crowned with a dome with a small lantern and a summit on the top.
The harmony of the temple forms inscribed in the mountain landscape is complemented with the exquisite proportions of the two-story square in plan with an octagonal top bell tower.
The tempera paintings of the 19th century have been preserved in the interior. The five-tiered iconostasis was painted (according to the autograph on the icon of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker) by the artist Antonii Orzhekhovskyi.
During the Soviet period from 1954 to 1987 the church was closed. In the mid-2012s, the shrine was restored from the outside. It is an architectural monument of national importance.