According to the reconstruction, the chapel and its adjacent buildings were not colonnaded.
Voussoir stones of the lateral rooms were found.
lintels, jambs, thresholds
A lintel decorated with a relief of a cross flanked with rosettes, was found nearby in the monastery atrium and was re-used as a building stone in a later wall from the Early Arab period. This lintel stone probably adorned the entrance into the chapel. It is said, that at the corners of the cross at the center of the lintel, the Greek letters ρ-χ, α-ω were carved, though they are not very well discernible. Usually this abbreviation symbolizes that Jesus Christ is the beginning and the end of life. In the entrance to Room 9, fragments of a lintel made of limestone were found. These were covered with several lines of a Greek inscription, mentioning the Byzantine Emperor Tiberius II (578-582 CE). Probably, this lintel, reused in the building of the Islamic period, originally belonged to the monastery, and thus we have a date for its construction.
According to the reconstruction, there were four posts on the bema.
According to the reconstruction, there were two panels hold by four posts. Segments of the marble panels were preserved in situ.
The members of the ciborium columns or altar legs were found scattered in the bema (probably, marble).
In the middle line on the chapel floor, near the bema, three small crosses were found carved on the floor slabs. A tomb was found underneath, carved into the bedrock and the walls were covered with plaster. Skeletons of three adults were laid westward with their heads and eastward with their legs (booted into the leather sandals). They were laid on the bed of Pupulus Euphratica leaves, which grows in the Negev.
Two of the cavities of the four columns of the ciborium, which stood above the altar table, were entirely preserved. The base and a fragment of the stem of the ciborium's round column (20 cm D) were found in situ in one of these (probably, marble; not indicated in the report).
The atrium was paved with a coarse white mosaic. The chapel floor was preserved intact. It was made of well-dressed, hard limestone slabs laid on a cement bed in ten parallel lines along the length of the chapel.
The entrance room's floor, the floor of the bema were revetted with the slabs of well-dressed hard limestone.
Apart from the tomb in front of the bema, more one burial of the woman's skeleton was found in the northwest room.