The homestead originally consisted of five buildings, i.e. a gate building, a cottage, a livestock building, a barn, and a stable-coach house. Only the gatehouse and the cottage have survived to this day. The gatehouse dates from 1812. This is evidenced by, among others, a record on the beam of the gate lintel, where the year of construction, the name of the carpenter and the owner are given. At the time of its creation, it belonged to Petter Mass. The building is a half-timbered structure with a gate passage and a separate pedestrian gate. It has only two windows that illuminate the interior. It is currently covered with a low asymmetrical roof. It was originally a gable roof. The front elevation is distinguished by a regular arrangement of columns and bolts forming a checkerboard pattern, typical of a half-timbered structure.
Inside the property there is a narrow-front cottage of the Lower Saxon type, also built in the half-timbered technique. It is visible when we stand next to the gatehouse. The cottage dates from the first half of the 18th century. The front elevation is four-storey. One can distinguish the ground floor, two levels of the gable wall of the attic and the pediment. The windows on the ground floor are small, rather square in shape, you can also see small windows within the gable. The cottage is covered with a hip roof, originally it was without a chimney. It had an open hearth and had a chimney gable roof. It is believed that this is the only facility of this type in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship. Apparently, there was an inn here during the Napoleonic Wars.
The general technical condition of the whole homestead is not quite good. Conservation work is necessary.