Demolished between July and September 2010; rubble spread around the site. The demolition was approved on June 30, 2010 by the Nejdek City Council, headed by Mayor Vladimír Benda; the demolition was recommended by the "Jde o Nejdek" association. Before demolition, the chapel's perimeter walls remained to a height of 1.5–3.5 m (the left wall was better preserved, the presbytery was in places preserved only to a height of approx. 1 m). A rectangular stone building with a small semicircular apse,.. Read more » covered with a sheet metal gable roof. The western entrance facade was topped with a triangular gable with a small brick bell tower. In front of the entrance to the chapel was a rectangular vestibule with a rectangular, semicircular entrance. The longitudinal walls were pierced by two narrow, semicircular windows. The exterior walls were smooth, without articulation. The chapel was built behind the last station of a new Way of the Cross, built between 1851 and 1858, on the top of the then-bare Křížový vrch (Cross Hill) in the eastern part of the town. In October 1923, as part of the electrification of the Way of the Cross, electricity was brought to the chapel and a small chandelier was acquired. After the forced displacement of the German population at the end of World War II, the abandoned chapel was no longer repaired, and after 1950 it began to fall into ruins. The land with the demolished chapel belongs to the town of Nejdek. Above the chapel, a maintained iron cross stands on a rock.