The Church of the Franciscans was built in the 14th century at the top of the city, as part of the old convent of which today only its beautiful cloister remains. In 1929, it was moved, stone by stone, to San Lázaro Park.

The facade features a rose window in the upper section, and the door, decorated with a triple archivolt, is centered with two buttresses. Columns with smooth and fluted shafts, adorned with phytomorphic, zoomorphic, and even anthropomorphic capitals (a bagpiper), decorate the entrance.

The church, with a single nave and an interior covered in wood, preserves Gothic tombs from the 16th century, belonging to the Noboa family, lords of Maceda, and the Cadórniga family. Finely crafted, they are adorned with noble armors and coats of arms.