The wooden church of St. John the Baptist was built in 1769. Its forms resemble St. Michael’s church in the neighboring Vyshka village. The church is three-story, built of spruce logs. The church stands on a hillside and is the architectural dominant of the old part of the village. It is an original example of a Boiko style wooden church. The temple is 15.7 m long and almost 5 m wide. The log houses walls are inclined to the middle. The central log house is square and the smaller log houses of the narthex and the altar are in the shape of a rounded square. Above the narthex there is a tier of an ancient bell tower, covered with a pyramidal hip roof. The domes are covered with stacks.
The temple floor is lined with sandstone slabs. The church has a unique iconostasis from 1679, which was moved from the previous church, which had burned down. Unfortunately, on the eve of 1975 the attic of the church was covered with corrugated sheet metal, and the roofs and walls were upholstered in 1991.
At the end of the 19th century a separate bell tower was erected, but in 2004 it burned down. In the same year a new, single-story bell tower was built.
An architectural monument of national importance.