The classicist manor house in Rurka was built around 1830. The building was designed on a rectangular plan measuring 9.18 by 13.86 meters. The single-storey manor house has a full basement. Unfortunately, the roof of the building, which originally had a hipped roof covered with beavertail tiles, has not survived. The side wing of the manor house was two-storey - unfortunately, this part of the manor house collapsed. The elevation of the manor house is symmetrical, seven-axis with a rectangular entrance in the central part of the facade. Stairs lead to the entrance. The original equipment has not survived inside the building. The window and door joinery has also not survived - only fragments of door frames are visible in one window, and fragments of wooden panel door frames have survived in the main entrance. The manor house was built of ceramic brick on foundations made of granite stones. The partition walls, also made of brick, were plastered with lime plaster. Only the partition walls have survived in the building. Since 1945, the property belonged to the State Agricultural Farm, which used it until 1973. Since then, the manor has been unused. It is currently in private hands and is being rebuilt. The manor is located in a farm complex north of the village buildings. The park surrounding the farm is divided into two parts by the Rurzyca River. The manor is located on the western side of the river.