St Alban's Church is a brick, Gothic style church with a fine timber arched buttress ceiling and an uncommon sloping floor.
The church is a heritage listed building.
Over time successive generations have added to the beauty of the church. The two small stained glass windows of St George and St Alban in the sanctuary are the work of William Bustard, a noted Australian artist and stained glassmaker of the first part of the twentieth century.
The simple altar of silky oak comes from the original St Alban's church, which was a wooden church built in 1914. That church also doubled as the local schoolroom before the building of the present Wilston State School.

The delicate woodwork in the sanctuary is the work of a former rector of the parish, The Reverend Theo Kernke.
The various stained glass windows, mostly made by Oliver Cowley, have been added over time.
The present porch and west wall with its large stained glass window was added in 1970. This colourful, modern stained glass cross has incorporated the theme of creation in it. The colours lighten as they come closer to the centre of the cross, symbolising that Jesus' death brings to the world a new beginning, a new creation.