The Palace in Turawa was erected in the mid-18th century for the owner of the goods in the village – Martin Scholz von Loewenckorn. The Upper Silesian nobleman commissioned the erection of a residence, which constituted one of the wings of the modern palace. Construction works were managed by the Opole architect Adam Tentschert. In the second half of the 18th century, another wing of the object was created, as well as an entrance gate to the property.
In 1937, the von Garnier family, to whom the palace belonged from the 20th century, donated the house to an orphanage.
To this day, a Rococo ballroom with gilded, carved, oak doors, a Neo-Renaissance sideboard, Rococo marble fireplaces, Baroque library cabinets, gilded wall decorations, decorative tiled stoves, and stuccoes in the sideboard hall have been preserved in the building. The palace is surrounded by a park from the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries with nature monuments: pedunculate oak, ashes, and small-leaved lime. The park adjoins the reservoir on the Mała Panew river.
Practical information:
The facility can be viewed from the outside.
Free parking spaces by the facility.
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