The temple's central prang has undergone restoration. Original stucco work can be seen, for example Garuda swooping down on nāga. Other mythical creatures as well as lotus are featured. Four Sri Lankan stupas surround the main prang.
 The prang's crypt, accessible by steep stairs, houses faded frescoes. These comprise some of the rare such examples from the early Ayutthaya period. The crypt's Buddha images, now housed in the Chao Sam Phraya Museum, exhibit both Khmer and Sukhothai influences.
 a Buddhist temple (wat) in the Ayutthaya Historical Park, Ayutthaya, Thailand. The temple's main prang is one of the finest in the city. Located in the island section of Ayutthaya, Wat Ratchaburana is immediately north of Wat Mahathat.
 
Perhaps because of this notoriety, the tower at Wat Ratchaburana is one of the few that remains open to the public. You can climb up to the chamber about half-way up the prang, where the public in ancient times would come to pray. Perhaps unbeknown to them, immediately beneath the chapel was a sealed chamber decorated with painted murals. There was yet another tiny chamber below this, decorated with more elaborate murals and holding a stone casket containing many small amulets and other items, mostly made of gold. These items surrounded a small reliquary holding a Buddha relic. A steep narrow stairway was built from the main chamber to access the twolower chambers when the tower was excavated