The Templar chapel, consecrated in 1248, is a small single-nave building with a separate, straight-ended presbytery. The church walls were built of precisely processed granite blocks arranged in regular layers.
The original entrance to the temple through the stepped portal has been preserved on the north side. Romanesque windows splayed on both sides and the oculus, now bricked up, have also survived on the west side. Capitals were discovered inside the presbytery, indicating that this part of the building was vaulted.
The Templars received the Bansk land in 1235. In Rurka nad Rurzycą, they quickly built a commandery, an unfortified settlement with a residential manor house, chapel, mill and farm buildings. From the mid-19th century, for almost a hundred years, the Templar chapel served as a distillery. From the entire structure, only the chapel has survived to this day.