The small sacral building was built in 1920 by the Archbishop's Forest and Estate Administration at the request of the local residents. They created a place of worship at the site of the future chapel at the mouth of the spring to honor the memory of the tragically deceased forest workers who died while cutting wood from Podolánky for the now defunct Archbishop's steelworks.
The wooden chapel was built in a folk style with Wallachian elements according to the design of the architect Ing. Roska from Kroměříž. Its architecture is strikingly reminiscent of the style of Jurkovič's buildings in Pustevny. Next to the chapel above the mountain spring, a wooden gazebo with a mosaic placed in a stone niche depicting St. Cyril holding a model of the church was built in the 1930s. Interesting fact: The chapel was originally dedicated to Saint Anne, but due to its lack of popularity during the communist era, when sacred buildings were often neglected, a local teacher in Parma saved the chapel by convincing the cultural commission that it was the "Cyrilka" spring and the Chapel of Saints Cyril and Methodius. These names are still used today.
After the Velvet Revolution, the monument was renovated and a pilgrimage is held here every year on the feast of the Apostles.