The building, which was built in the Baltic architectural style at the end of the 19th century, in the East-West direction, has a rectangular plan and consists of three parts. The main part of the colonnaded entrance door on the north façade is made of cut stone, and the north and south-facing entrance façades of this part are made of wood in a semi-oval shape. On the right and left of the main building, there are two more two-storey sections with the basement, the foundation walls of which are made of stone, the facade walls of wood, and the entrance doors open from the north. The facade walls of these two sections are composed of two interlocking rows of completely symmetrical pine trees. The diameter of the wooden beams is almost the same and they were built with the technique of overlapping and side by side. There are 8 large and 4 small windows with triangular tops on the north and south facades of the building. There is a column on each side of the columned entrance door on the north facade and a high hipped roof on the roof that forms the top of this column section. The columned door on the north facade and the entrance doors of the wooden building forming the side sections are accessed by stairs. There are also 4 windows on the side facades of the building.