The synagogue is topped with brick gables and its interior is starkly simple and little changed since the 13th century, with one prayer hall for the men and an adjoining gallery, from which women can watch services. An elaborate wrought-iron grill encases the pulpit and the Torah scrolls are contained in a Torah ark on the eastern wall. A couple of electric chandeliers illuminate the once-dark interior and a red banner of the Prague Jewish Community above, with the emblem of the ghetto (Star of David with a Jewish hat inside) hangs above.
Walking tours of Prague’s Jewish Quarter typically visit the Old-New Synagogue, along with such other notable attractions as the city’s four other synagogues and the Old Jewish Cemetery. These tours provide an in-depth perspective and history of Jewish life in Prague that you might not get on your own.