The urbanistic monument of republican significance is a stone-paved rectangular square of the town, named after Petrauskas of Cyprus. The town's street network, the plan of the square and its volumetric spatial composition, building fragments, and the panorama of the entire town testify to the importance of the old times. Markets were held here, Jews built wooden houses around the square and engaged in small trade. in 1897 217 Jews lived in the town. In the center of the square stood a gazebo for performances. The pre-war wooden well in the center was replaced by a stone one (author: sculptor Juozas Lebednykas). Until 1978 a stone-paved street wound from the square past the church towards the cemetery, while the roads were paved with asphalt. In the parking lot on a round pedestal - St. Rock sculpture (sculptor Juozas Lebednykas). The red brick two-story brick house with half-basements is a building belonging to the church built at the beginning of the twentieth century with the money of the parishioners. After the war, there was a pharmacy, a post office, a shop, and apartments for officers. The county board was functioning. Now there is a hospital. Closer to the church, priest Milžinas in 1941. had built an oak cross for exiles.