Phase I. A rectangular building (8 × 12 m; Figs. 2–5) whose walls (W101–W104) were built of fieldstones and dressed stones was unearthed. The construction was meticulous and neat; all the building’s corners were constructed of large, dressed stones (Fig. 6). An opening (width 2 m) was set in W103. Four stone slabs that served as the base of a wooden column were revealed in the center of the building (L6). Several items were found on the floor, including a glass bottle bearing the caption “STEFAN HADJ & SONS HAIFA” (Fig. 7), dating no earlier than 1942 (Palestine Gazette 1942). Metal artifacts and glass fragments were also found.
 
Phase II. Three rooms (L7–L9) oriented along an east–west axis were added at the northern end of the building. The walls of the rooms were built of fieldstones, and the quality of their construction was inferior to that of the building of the previous phase. Room 7, adjacent to W104, has a pillar (W113) that served to divide the room. The entrance to the room was situated in the east (width 1.1 m). Room 8 was not as well preserved as the other rooms; it seems that the northern wall of the room was destroyed at some point and later reinforced with large fieldstones. A doorway (width 0.9 m) was set in the southern wall (W108). Hearths were identified on the floor of Room 9, and an opening (width 1 m) was noted in the southern wall (W110).
 
Phase I. A rectangular building (8 × 12 m; Figs. 2–5) whose walls (W101–W104) were built of fieldstones and dressed stones was unearthed. The construction was meticulous and neat; all the building’s corners were constructed of large, dressed stones (Fig. 6). An opening (width 2 m) was set in W103. Four stone slabs that served as the base of a wooden column were revealed in the center of the building (L6). Several items were found on the floor, including a glass bottle bearing the caption “STEFAN HADJ & SONS HAIFA” (Fig. 7), dating no earlier than 1942 (Palestine Gazette 1942). Metal artifacts and glass fragments were also found.
 
Phase II. Three rooms (L7–L9) oriented along an east–west axis were added at the northern end of the building. The walls of the rooms were built of fieldstones, and the quality of their construction was inferior to that of the building of the previous phase. Room 7, adjacent to W104, has a pillar (W113) that served to divide the room. The entrance to the room was situated in the east (width 1.1 m). Room 8 was not as well preserved as the other rooms; it seems that the northern wall of the room was destroyed at some point and later reinforced with large fieldstones. A doorway (width 0.9 m) was set in the southern wall (W108). Hearths were identified on the floor of Room 9, and an opening (width 1 m) was noted in the southern wall (W110).
 
No artifacts that provide an exact date were discovered in the excavated structure. The building is slated for conservation and will remain within an open space in Lehavim.