The church in Santa Engracia has a large and solid structure. It was built in the 18th century in the shape of a Latin cross with three naves, the central nave being taller and broader than the lateral naves. The transept is crowned by an octagonal dome. There is a raised choir gallery at the western end and a bell tower on the north side. The most remarkable and valuable element of the exterior of the temple is the main doorway. It is designed in the shape of an altar with two levels, one of which has three sections with corresponding niches that once housed statues.
The interior has an interesting collection of 17th- and 18th-century altarpieces. The main altar is covered with a Barroque piece dating from the end of the 17th century, with a particularly skilled carving of St Engracia. The altarpieces of St Parentela, the Virgen del Rosario and St Michael are from a later date. The first of these, also Barroque, is of exceptional quality and is divided into sections by Solomonic columns.
The altarpiece of the Virgen del Pilar in the south transept is worthy of note for its size. Initially conceived as a tabernacle, it was made in the middle of the 18th century, a fact confirmed by its Rococo design. Other pieces, which may have belonged to a earlier temple, are also kept in the Santa Engracia church. These include a Virgen del Rosario and a 16th-century Romanist “Ecce Homo”.