The community bakehouse in Recht was built in about 1840, probably by the Tyrol stonemasons' families Zangerle, Starck, Graf and Meyer, who had settled near a slate quarry between 1725 and 1735. On the walls of the bakehouse the layers of slate can still be seen clearly. The weathered shale is an indication that the stone came from the upper levels of the mine, the stone from the lower levels being much more compact.
The bakehouse consists of the main room, in which the work used to be done, and a lower annexe, in which the actual oven is situated. The oven consists of building bricks, fired bricks and a concrete floor plate. In front of it, the chimney rises in the main room. The lower part is built in the manner of a corbel made of shale, with brickwork above it. The walls of the bakehouse are made of rough shale and clay. By contrast, the embrasures of the doors and windows are made of hewn shale blocks.
During works being carried out in the vicinity of the bakehouse, a deep well was discovered on the south side with a massive shale frame. The community bakehouse has been listed as a historical monument since 1994.