The small asymmetrical Chakar Mosque was built on the site of an old religious building that had fallen into disrepair. Only the summer part of the building has survived, representing a columned ivan closed on three sides, open to the east, with a flat ceiling. The winter hall and outbuildings are now lost.
The paintings of the ceiling are peculiar, divided by beams into rectangular plafonds, each of which contains original grooves with bouquets of flowers on a green or red background. The high figured cornice of the ivan has a floral ornament — shamrocks with red flowers. On one of the beams, the builders dug out the date of construction — 1329 AH (1911) and their names Tukhtabek and Mirbobo Khodji from Khojikeit.
The delicate combination of colors and decorative compositions of the lampshades are an example of the applied art of Fergana folk craftsmen.