Stately mansion building of the hospital ensemble of the Louise Gueury Foundation in Hardter Wald, in free reference to the town houses of the Bergisch Barock. 2-storey rectangular building with a mansard roof that has been dismantled and flattened to one side. Symmetrically structured display side in 9 axes; right-wing covered windows of differing height and width, smoothly cut into the soffits. Rough plastered ground floor and from the roof to over the top cross-graining of the walls. Emphasis of the middle yoke by an exaggerated triangular gable; on the ground floor by a 3-axis porch, in which the accessible via a two-flight staircase entrance is arranged. In the middle of the hipped roof, which leads up to the front of the building, is a bow-shaped alcove containing segmental arch form, each of which exposes 5 narrow, vertically aligned, rectangular windows. The copper-covered dome roof is flanked to the right and left by an oblong window. In the two, the gable adjacent axes above the encircling cornice, each a zweifenstige dormer with Segmentbogigem degree. In the upper gable field a single high oval window. The northwestern side front shows on the ground and first floors 3 from the center to the right asymmetrically arranged and tightly summarized high rectangular windows. The roof area below the Walms breaks through a broad-based 3-legged dormer, also crowned segmental arc. An illuminated in 2 levels with a total of 5 windows tail gable accentuates the opposite side. It is subdivided in the EC by wall templates in 3 equal wall panels, which are each opened by a wide window. On the upper floor a few windows in the middle. The back front emphasizes a risalit in front of the right-hand section of the building with a tail gable formed in the same way as the side panel. The uniform density fenestration corresponds essentially to that of the front; However, the two dormers are arranged deviating left of the pediment. The windows are split in plastic (so-called "sprouts in aspic"). Also changed is the glazed and plastic entrance area. From the construction period have received the original Schlagläden. The interior is modernized and rebuilt accordingly to today's use as a conference center for mentally handicapped children. The original spatial planning was essentially preserved.