Neo-Romanesque church, located on the site of an earlier 16th-century, half-timbered temple. Built in 1861, when the owners of the local estate were the von Klitzing family. The temple was built of granite blocks, aisle-shaped, oriented, towerless, with an apse on a semicircular plan and a brick bell tower above the western gable. The portal and window openings are made of ceramic brick. There is much to suggest that the local church was designed by the famous German architect Martin Gropius. He was friends with the von Klitzing family, for whom he built an impressive palace (only the foundations remain). The church survived and an application was submitted to enter it in the register of monuments. Near the temple (towards Cybów) there is a cemetery with old tombstones.