The sanctuary was designed by the Detroit architect Leon Coquard and is inspired by the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. Services were first held in 1901, with the Madison Avenue façade, designed by the local architect David Davis, added between 1908 and 1910. The structure is constructed of Bedford stone, and the roofs are covered with red ludovici tile. It measures 194 ft × 144 ft (59 m × 44 m), and the nave reaches a height of 81 ft (25 m). The cathedral project terminated in 1915, although it remains incomplete to this day with the planned 52 ft (16 m) towers unbuilt.[2]
The restoration of the cathedral earned a 2002 Preservation Award from the Cincinnati Preservation Association.[3] For the interior restoration, Conrad Schmitt Studios cleaned the stone ribs, tracery and walls. Studio artists also restored plaster and select faux stone painting.
The interior was modeled after St. Denis in France. It contains murals by Covington native Frank Duveneck, with the high altar carved from Carrara marble and with floors of Rosata and Breche marble.[2]
The cathedral is famous for what is said to be the world's largest handmade church stained glass window, at 67 ft × 24 ft (20.4 m × 7.3 m).[4] Located in the north transept of the cathedral, the upper portion depicts the Coronation of Mary after her Assumption. The lower portion is a depiction of the Ecumenical Council of Ephesus in 431 AD that proclaimed Mary the 'Theotokos' (God-Bearer or Mother of God). The window was created by Mayer and Company of Munich, Germany, and installed in 1911. It was fully restored in 2001.[5]
The cathedral houses three pipe organs. The south transept gallery holds the pipe organ designed by Henry Willis III during his tenure at the Wicks Organ Company of Highland, Illinois. This organ was blessed on February 12, 1933, in a ceremony that also commemorated the anniversary of Pope Pius XI's coronation.[6] Originally a three-manual console with 43 ranks of pipes, Aultz-Kersting Organ renovated and enlarged this instrument in 1982 to four-manuals with 65 ranks.
The west gallery, below the rose window, is occupied by the two-manual organ originally built for St. Joseph Roman Catholic Church in Covington, Kentucky, in 1858 by Mathais Schwab of Cincinnati, Ohio. When the St. Joseph building was razed in 1970, the Schwab organ was moved to St Mary's. The Schwab organ was altered to fit the new location, but retains most of its original components, including its mechanical key and stop actions, ivory keyboards and faux-grained casework. It contains 21 ranks. In 2002, the cathedral purchased a one-manual, 20-rank portable organ for use in various parts of the sanctuary.[7]