St. Michael’s church is one of the few wooden temples built in remote villages that has remained whole. The temple was built in 1658, according to the carved inscription on the doorpost. The wooden church is built of larch and oak logs, which are covered by a gabled roof. Log cabins of the nave and narthex are of the same width, the corner joints of which are connected in a simple lock. Above the narthex there is a low square tower with lining, without any roof lantern posts, completed with octagonal spire with an ‘apron’, typical of Transcarpathian Gothic churches. The wide low gabled roof at the west wall of the narthex turns into a canopy of the porch, which has recently been turned into a glazed veranda. Above the narthex there is a low square tower, which ends with an octagonal hip roof, which turns into a high octagonal sharp spire.
The octagonal spire end with an octagonal ‘apron’ was previously covered with oak shingles. The temple floor is laid with sandstone slabs. Near the church there is a bell tower typical of Verkhovyna villages – two-tiered frame with a wide long terrace.
After the renovations in 1996, the temple and bell tower roofs were covered with tin, and the ancient log cabins were covered with spruce parquet.