
Białogarda - the ruins dating back to the turn of the 12th and 13th centuries are the only trace of the Castellan’s town of Białogarda. A neo-Romanesque church and a church yard from the end of the 19th century. The foundations of the mill and the miller’s house from the turn of the 13th and 14th centuries; the walls from the beginning of the 19th century.
Charbrowo - the Somnitz family palace from 1660 with three wings joined with corners: the main first floor corner and the side one-storey corners. In the mid-19th century the north wing was demolished and on the long line of the building the Widow’s House, as it was called, was added in 1907. At the beginning of the 20th century the south wing was made higher and a little tower was added where the wings met. The residence is surrounded by a park in which one may find the family’s sepulchral chapel from the first half of the 19th century. At present, it serves as a hotel. A small St Joseph church from 1669 with a shingled roof, and massive, supported by buttresses, walls and a low tower. The church has the Renaissance- Baroque décor. The churchyard with 19th-century gravestones and a memorial to the victims of WW I.
Nowęcin - the palace buildings complex of the Wejher family. The castle erected by Nicolas Wejher was a Gothic building. In the 16th century it was converted by Ernest Wejher who added the Renaissance part and the Jerusalem Chapel. The subsequent conversion in the 19th century changed the palace’s architectural style into the neo-Gothic style. The building is surrounded by the park, where one may see a 19th-century sepulchral chapel. At present, “Soplica” Hotel. An extensive former farm building complex, comprising the 19th-century stables, granaries and living quarters for farm labourers.
Poraj - a palace dating back to the end of the 19th century. It once housed the German Institute of Swamp Cultivation. The palace resembles an impressive, multi-storey villa laid out on a square plan. Each façade has a central, shallow risalit going well beyond the roof ridge. A wooden veranda on the stone underpinning with distinguishing arched windows was added to the west side. At present it serves as a guest house.
Roszczyce - a little manor house built in the latter half of the 19th century. An inconspicuous, one-storey building laid out on a much extended rectangular plan and topped with a jerkin head roof. The small classical portal constitutes the only decorative element. In the line of the manor house there is an outbuilding covered with a mansard roof. The two buildings are connected by a low annex. The house is surrounded by a large park with old trees. The manor house and the outbuilding are each owned by different owners now.
A church in Baroque style from 1659 built as a result of extending the sepulchral chapel of the Krokowski family of Roszczyce. An oriented, single-nave and closed from three sides building, with a little Baroque tower. The Renaissance and Baroque décor dating back to the 18th century has survived to date. An impressive epitaph on the chancel wall commemorates the parish’s benefactors buried in the crypt beneath. The gravestone of the Gruber family located in the churchyard is a little younger as it “only” dates back to the 19th century.
Sarbsk - a church built at the beginning of the 20th century. It replaced the old one, which had been demolished two years earlier.
Ulinia - a multi-storey palace erected in the latter half of the 19th century, expanded in 1924. It was then that it was given the modernist form and the pastel façade. The proportions of the building’s main mass are distorted by asymmetric additions: verandas, an outbuilding and the outermost risalit. The palace is topped with a tall mansard roof with numerous attics. It is surrounded by a park with noble trees. At present it serves as a summer camp centre.
Wicko - a period manor house built in the 1880s. An inconspicuous, one-storey building with a two-storey risalit and attics. In the 1970s a school building was added to it. The whole is surrounded by the relics of a small park. A Teutonic border stone with an engraved cross located in the village centre.
Zdrzewno - a two-storey palace of the Zindras family erected in 1867. Converted in 1922 by Karol Fryderyk Zindras, the son of the owner. The facades are decorated with floral ornaments and plaster in the form of panels and pilasters. It is surrounded by a park with old trees and interesting plants. Private property. A Dutch-style windmill from 1765, called “the Dutch”, is the only preserved windmill in Lębork County. It has an oval brick shell with the diameter of 9.5m and a four-sail propeller. The interior was destroyed by fire in 1957. Private property.












