It is very good that they continue to restore and preserve the estates, but it would be even better if this complex were really preserved as a manor, but unfortunately this building was given over to residential premises, and the stables and the servants' house are in a deplorable state. There are two beautiful lakes nearby, which are overgrown with grass.
In fact, reconstruction has been carried out and there is nothing historical left. Now it is an ordinary apartment building and the color of the facade of the building is the same as in other places where the reconstruction took place. I recommend visiting the remains of a windmill nearby.
I recently got to know this estate firsthand, as they say, and was surprised by the news that the estate belonged to the Russian Count Dmitry Mavros, who was an aide-de-camp to the infamous Governor-General Muravyov, the "hangman".
At the turn of the 2010s, the building was reconstructed for residential apartments. To date, the house is residential, all apartments are occupied. Somehow...
the building itself resembles a small steamboat). The lower basement level of the building was adapted by residents as storerooms for all kinds of food and vegetable supplies for the winter). The spirit of antiquity is present in the basements - this is noticeable by the laying of the foundation, which contains rubble stone.
We visited this place in July 2021. The landmark has been converted into a residential building. It's trash, we drove up, took a look and left. I didn't even understand what kind of landmark it was, what its history was, and how could you do this to it?
It's worth a look, but like for all other historical monuments of the Republic of Belarus, it's a shame... If the chairman of the local SEC had not reconstructed an apartment building, then there probably would not have been a monument...
It's an apartment building now. There are rags, linen, buckets.... The condition is good, visible after repair. Nicely. There are old trees left from the park. Beautiful ponds.