Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the village of Kemelishki
The temple, rebuilt in 1900, is an example of the interpretation of neo-Gothic elements in wooden architecture. The building imitates a stone three-nave basilica with a transept and two four-pointed towers on the main facade. The upper octagonal tiers of the towers are completed with pointed tents. The gable roof of the transept is lower than the main one, and corresponds in height to the same roof over the entrance four-column porch. The increase in the height of the roofs, the romantic completion of the towers, give picturesqueness and variety to the three-dimensional composition. The windows have arched ends, at the ends of the transept – rhombic lunettes. The walls are sheathed horizontally, with a basement panel, and reinforced with screeds. The interior is divided by six pillars. On the south side of the church there are three-span stone gates and a wooden three-tiered four-tiered bell tower, covered with a four-pitched tent-“hood” with a peaked signature.