The palace in Leśno Górne is located on a private property and is surrounded by a high fence. The history of the building dates back to the 1890s. It was built in the neo-Gothic style, but you can also see elements of eclecticism in it. The building has three floors, and in the right corner, looking from the front, there is an octagonal tower. The walls of the palace are plastered in white and there are numerous windows in them, thanks to which the interior of the building is bright and sufficiently lit. The property changed owners several times. The last pre-war owners of the property in Leśno Górny, and thus the palace, were Johannes and Emma Brüssow, who gave their estates its final shape. In the 1920s, during the renovation that followed a fire, the building was equipped with electricity, central heating, water and sewage. The Brüssow family also established a palace park here, where weeping willows, lindens, maples and oaks grew and still grow to this day. There is a small pond next to the building. Nearby, among the trees, there is a memorial stone in honor of the poet Herman Löns, erected there in 1943, on the 20th anniversary of his death. In the post-war years, the army was based in the palace, and later the building served as a residence for families working in the Szczecin-Gumieńce State Agricultural Farm. At the beginning of the 90s of the last century, the palace and the park were purchased by a private person, who unfortunately did not carry out any conservation works here. The object passed into the hands of another private owner, who this time took care of the condition and surroundings of the object in an appropriate manner. Currently, the building is adapted to fulfill a residential and service function. There are former farm and farm buildings in the vicinity of the palace. The area can be viewed from the outside, from behind the gate.