A clearing with numerous stands for bonfires, shelters with tables and benches. Right next to the Arkonka Bathing Site.
The first tenant of the area where the forester's lodge was located was the miller Henricus Steenvort, mentioned already in 1305. He built a mill on the Ringing Potok stream (Klingende Beke), which was named after him, the Steinfurth mill. The first mention of the mill is a record from 1335 about the sale to Szczecin townspeople by the cathedral chapter in Kamień Pomorski, represented, among others, by bishop Fryderyk von Eickstedt, the village of Niemierzyn (Nemitz) with adjoining areas, including a mill called de steenvortmole. It was one of the three mills owned by the village of Niemierzyn (actually four mills, including the so-called Sand Mill) at the Goplany Lake, then known as the Sand See Lake. In the second half of the 17th century, next to the grain mill (Stenfort, 1693; Steinforter Mühle, 1699), there was also a water sawmill (1669). Further known to us records in source documents are Steinfurtsche Mühle (1779, 1794), Steinforthmühle (1801), and Steinfortsche Mühle (1803).
The mill was situated on the north-west edge of the Niemierzyńska Valley (Nemitzer Talgrund) in the south-east part of the now defunct Martinsee Lake. The miller had the right to catch fish in the nearby Goplana Lake. During the war in 1677, the mill was burnt down and then rebuilt again. During the French occupation in 1808-1813 there were barracks of the French army here. On April 1, 1911, the mill, which at that time was part of the former farm "Eckerberg" (Gut Eckerberg), was incorporated into the municipal commune of Szczecin.
The buildings after 1945 were handed over to the management of the Municipal Forests of the city of Szczecin, which created a forester's lodge here, initially called "Czerwona forester's lodge", and then "Red Forester's Lodge" because of the color of the bricks from which it was built, and also unlike the nearby Miodowa Street " Forester's Lodge in Biała ". In the 1990s, the buildings of the forester's lodge were demolished, and a recreational area was created in the clearing. It was fenced, equipped with shelters, benches and places to light a fire. The "Arkonka" bathing beach was built on the site of the lake and has now been thoroughly rebuilt.