The Palace in Radawie was built in the mid-19th century on the site of a wooden hunting manor. In the 1920s, Count Balthasar von Aulock rebuilt the building in the classicist style. After World War II, the building became the property of the State Treasury, and a holiday camp center was located there first, and then a home for the elderly. Currently, the palace along with the adjacent area belongs to a social welfare home.
The building erected on a rectangular plan is brick and plastered. It has two stories and basements, covered with a flat roof. The main entrance is accentuated by a portico supported on pillars, to which wide stairs lead. At the entrance to the grange area stands a figure of St. John of Nepomuk and a gate with an inscription with the initials of Ludwik von Schmakowski, one of the owners of the palace.
The palace is surrounded by an English park with a pond and old trees: pedunculate and red oak, London plane, and tulip tree.
Practical information:
The facility is not open to visitors.
Free parking below the facility.
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