In 2010, the church's perimeter walls were restored to a height of 0.1 - 0.5 m. Built between 1796 and 1797 by Jan Hainz, based on plans by J. Binder, the church replaced an earlier wooden chapel of the Holy Spirit from 1787. The single-nave structure was constructed of quarry stone. The rectangular nave measured 18.8 x 9.15 m, and the three-sided presbytery measured 9.15 m wide by 5.4 m deep, with a height of approximately 12 m. A gabled roof and a low wooden tower (approx. 4.5 m) topped the .. Read more »front. Both nave and tower were shingled, with a sacristy added to the presbytery's axis. Both the nave and presbytery had flat ceilings. The nave walls were unadorned, lit by three low, elongated, segmentally arched windows. Identical windows were in the presbytery. The west facade featured two pilasters flanking a rectangular portal, with a small window above. A small porch was later added to the portal. A gallery in the west end of the nave was lit by a small rectangular window and a window in the west wall. The furnishings dated from the 19th century. After 1948, the church fell into disrepair; by the 1970s, the roof had large holes. Although a repair project was developed, the local National Committee pushed for demolition. The church's heritage protection was removed on May 31, 1976. On August 31, 1976, the District National Committee in Prachatice ordered the church's demolition by April 30, 1977; however, the church was demolished in 1976. The nearby cemetery, destroyed in May 1976, was restored in 2008.