The aristocratic Wulfshagen estate is one of the late foundings in Schleswig-Holstein. It was founded only a few years before the construction of the baroque mansion by the widowed Magdalena von Thienen auf Hütten, who moved her Gettorfer Meierhof to this place in 1673.
The mansion is flanked on the side by two single-storey cavalier houses and together with them forms a courtyard of honor. In front of the manor house is a self-contained farm yard, the access of which leads between two half-timbered buildings from 1788. The image of the farmyard is determined by four mighty barns that are stored in parallel, of which the large thatched half-timbered barn probably dates from the 18th century and the thatched, yellow stone-built cow house from 1830. In addition to several half-timbered houses from the 18th and 19th centuries. In the 19th century, the "old school" on the site of the aristocratic Wulfshagen estate has been preserved. It was built in 1859 under Karl von Qualen as a school for the children of the estate workers and closed in 1928 when the Schleswig-Holstein estate districts were dissolved. After several conversions, there is now a café and a patisserie in the "old school".