Church of St. Wojciecha, built in the 16th century, stands in the center of the village. It was built when the estate was owned by the von Schönebeck family. At that time, it was a building built on a rectangular plan, with a hall without a separate chancel and covered with a gable roof. In the 18th century, a four-sided, two-story half-timbered tower was added to the nave on the western side. In 1900, the tower was raised by another storey made of wood, covered with a conical roof topped with a ball with a wind flag on which the date of the tower's expansion (1900) and a cross were placed. There is a bell from 1545 hanging on the tower.
Inside the church, noteworthy are the wooden altar from 1725 with sculptures by Heinrich Bernhard Hattenkerell, the ceiling and the tombstone of the von Schönebeck family. On the altar wall there is a modern fresco referring to the theme of the "Gniezno Doors". The church was destroyed at the end of World War II and rebuilt in 1968-75.
In 2010, during the renovation of the church facade, a "time capsule" was found in the ball crowning the top of the roof. It was a brass container with a document from 1900 written in German and a description of the renovation works carried out at the church and 44 coins from the years 1668 - 1900. A "time capsule" supplemented with a document describing the renovation of the church carried out in 2010 and contemporary coins and banknotes placed in a ball on the top of the tower's roof.