The Wat Chang Rop’s most important structure was its imposing chedi. The chedi stood on a well preserved square base, each side measuring 31 meters long, surrounded by 68 elephant statues protruding out of the structure. The Sukhothai style elephants seem to carry the chedi on their backs. While most of the laterite stuccoed sculptures are badly damaged, the fine decorations still shows on some of them. The space between the elephants was adorned with reliefs of floral designs, of which nothing is left.
A very steep stairway at each of the four cardinal directions leads to the large platform on top of the base, at the center of which stood the chedi. Flanking the bottom of each stairway was a pair of lion statues and guardians. The outline of a few of the statues that were covered with stucco can still be made out. Surrounding the platform is a brick wall with entrance archways at the center and small chedis at the four corners.
At the center of the platform stood the chedi, which has collapsed. Little more than the octagonal base and some of the lower receding circular tiers is left of what is believed to have been a bell shaped chedi in Singhalese style. The reliefs of Buddhist depictions that adorned the octagonal base have disappeared. The Singhalese style bell was topped with a tapering finial. Buddhist devotees used to walk the platform circling the chedi in a clockwise direction to make merit. Surrounding the principal chedi was a large number of subsidiary chedis, of which only the base remain today.