HUNTING PALACE
A manor house rebuilt into a so-called hunting palace - built in the final years of the 18th century. In 1829 enlarged by the Duninowski family, and then rebuilt in the years 1932-1933. It remains in this form to this day.
Until 1945, the property of the Ike-Duninowski family.
Built of brick on a stone plinth, plastered. Barrel vault in the basement. Queen-post roof truss with standing queen-posts. Above the towers, post-and-beam trusses, covered with arches. Double, four-part, four-level casement windows. On the upper floor, closed with a segmental arch, in the attic, box-shaped, divided, three-level, and in the towers, two-part.
The current form of the palace has features of many styles. Built on a rectangular plan with the right wing tilted 60° to the front in the north-west direction, with the central part set back inwards, beyond the pediment. Three-bay, asymmetrical with two entrances from the front, one in the eastern side elevation and one from the garden area.
Single-storey side wings with a residential mansard, two-storey central part, three-storey towers. Compact bulk, side wings with a mansard roof, central wings covered with a gable roof, towers with multi-pitched roofs.
Entered into the register of monuments in 1975.
Source: Local information