Church of St. Francis is a one-nave structure with a gothic vaulted semicircular apse. The east apse is architecturally articulated with two elongated Gothic windows. The same windows were certainly on the south side, but due to the subsequent construction of the bell towers. The bell tower of the church was completed in 1743. Opposite the Franciscan church was the monastery of the Claris. The Clareys have a very strict clause, so they complained when constructing the Franciscan bell tower because their garden could be seen from it. The church on the south facade has three Gothic windows. The aforementioned windows are absent from the north side, as probably the earlier church, monastery and town ramparts were located there. Of decorative plastic it is necessary to mention the Venetian winged lion with a closed book from XIII. century, today located on the facade above the walled entrance. The closed book points to the fact that Venice was at war then. The church was in any case remodeled and lengthened, so this door may have once been the main entrance to the church, and then this relief says a lot about the time of its construction.

The monastery was built north of today's church. There is not much information on the construction of the monastery, but it is known that in 1500 the Dalmatian Provost Sebastian Justiniani allowed the opening of window openings on the part along the city walls. In 1625, a cistern was constructed with a rainwater-powered cloister flowing from four roofs. This confirms that by that time the church had already been extended and that all the monastery buildings existed (except the eastern part - the seminary from 1910).

Church and Monastery of St. The Franciscans talk a lot about the tradition of the Franciscan Order in Krk. There is a legend, written in 1500, that St. Due to his storm, Francis landed in Krk and met a hermit here who accepted his teachings, after which the Franciscan Order was founded on Krk.