The estate began to take shape around the 20s of the 19th century. in the style of classicism by Brigitte Shumskaya, whose initials are preserved on some stones. Later, the owner donated her estate to Alexander Borovsky, and after that it passed to the last owner, Ivan Borovsky. The manor house itself was wooden and one-story, with two verandas, a terrace with balustrades, and extensive cellars. Together with the service wing, two symmetrically located identical rectangular barns, a stable made of rubble stone and fences, the house formed a closed front courtyard with a circular lawn in the center. In 1905, the estate was badly damaged by a big fire, but the Borovskys rebuilt it, replacing many wooden buildings and even the fence with stone ones. The last time the manor house burned down was in 1942 and was not preserved at all, and all that remained from the manor buildings was a chapel, part of a fence, the ruins of a barn and outbuildings. The master's cowsheds, in their rebuilt form, are still used for their intended purpose.