In keeping with the character of the Mission Revival there are few other decorative details.
The design is an eclectic mix of Mission Revival and commercial styles.
Mission Revival, Prairie School, and the 'California bungalow' styles of residential building remain popular in the United States today.
Kahn's Mission Revival hangars (Buildings 501, 502 and 503 from 1918) are similar in materials with red clay tile, gabled roofs.
Mission Revival, Colonial Revival, and other "revival" styles of architecture are most common.
The original campus was also designed in the Spanish-colonial style common to California known as Mission Revival.
In addition, Mission Revival, California's first indigenous architecture, dominated smaller commercial architecture.
Mission Revival became the state's signature style, a blend of arches and towers and tiles that graced every sort of building from school to train station.
Mission Revival features include the tiled gable roof with exposed rafter ends, round-arched windows and buttressed side walls.
The church building has been described as being in the Mission Revival or Spanish Renaissance style.