The height of an elongated square pyramid (i.e., the distance between the pyramid's apex and the plane of the farthest square) is the sum of the cube's side and the height of an equilateral square pyramid. Its surface area is the sum of four equilateral triangles and four squares' area. Its volume is the sum of an equilateral square pyramid and a cube's volume. With edge length , the formulation for each is:[6][4]
The dihedral angle between adjacent triangles is that of a regular octahedron (which can be seen as a square bipyramid), .
The dihedral angle between adjacent squares is that of a cube, .
In a square pyramid, the dihedral angle between the square base and a triangle side is ; thus in an elongated square pyramid the angle between a triangle and a square, on the edge where the pyramid attaches to the cube, is