The compound, based on the residence built for the British consul in 1851, was later used as a hospital run by the KaiserswerthDeaconesses, a German Protestant congregation, before being bought by Lebanese Maronites in the early 1890s.[4] It comprises a Maronite chapel, as well as the Pilgrim's Guesthouse of Saint Maron (French: Foyer de Saint Maron), maintained by Maronite nuns from the Congregation of Saint Therese of the Child Jesus.[5] In addition to that, it hosts a pilgrim organisation called Peregrinatio Jubilaum Jerusalem (PJJ), set up in 1999 by the Maronite Church in charge of organising tours.[6]