We present to you the offer of the palace and manor complex of the Szembek family
in Poręba Żegota, Alwernia municipality with a rich history, which can be extended and new pages can be saved
on its pages.
A component of the offer is a ready-made project for the reconstruction and expansion of the entire Palace Complex. The property can be used for various types of services, where the location, history, size of the area, and the entire design documentation are a huge added value of the offer and can constitute a large part of the investment success.
Usable area in variant 1 - 6443.23m2
Plot area: 5.7445ha
A beautiful landscape park, which covers an area of about 4 ha.
The property consists of cadastral plots No. 469 and 470.
Designation in the current Local Spatial Development Plan
Approx. 1.5ha is located in the area of 30U- Service development areas
Approx. 20ar is located in the area 08MN/U-Single-family residential development areas with services
3.9898ha is located in the area 05ZP- Landscaped green areas
Covering the area and parameters of the facility:
Mausoleum:
Footprint area: 44.33m2
Total area: 44.33m2
Usable area: 24.56m2
Cubic volume: 255.34m3
Historical outline:
The present Palace and Park Complex was built in several stages between the end of the 17th century and the beginning of the 20th century, when it was rebuilt by architect Tadeusz Stryjeński.
According to the descriptions of the manor house, in the years in the extreme, southern wing there was then a "fortified chapel", in the outline preserved to this day.
It was three-level, with a ladder to the basement and an entrance to the upper floor via external spiral stairs. Built on a plan similar to a square, it is made of stone.
The Koryciński Manor – XVII century
the construction of the seat could be dated with great caution to the beginning of the seventeenth century.
This team probably did not differ significantly from the preferred solutions of the time
in the residences of the middle-class nobility, bears all the valuable typicalities codified in slightly later treatises and building manuals.
First half of the eighteenth century – Morstin's Palace
The seat enters the new century in a deplorable technical condition. The next owner was forced to carry out thorough renovations and modernization of the entire complex.
In 1740, the name of the seat appears for the first time as a palace with a courtyard.
The second half of the eighteenth century – the Szembek Palace
Aleksander Szembek, chamberlain of King Stanisław August, takes over his mother's inheritance and begins to build a residence worthy of his family on a grand scale.
In 1782 the new one received the king in a new, magnificent palace.
A certain modification of the park's décor was carried out at the end of the 19th century, replacing the clearing in front of the palace with tennis courts surrounded by flowerbeds.
The circular lawn on the driveway was planted with thujas and acacias.
The interiors of the Szembek Palace were full of souvenirs of the past. The main decoration and wealth was the famous library with Gdańsk furniture or portraits of ancestors.
In the palace, burned down in 1945 and partially demolished, there was a valuable library and rich art collections.
The mausoleum of the Szembek family, which is a part of the property
was built in 1921 according to the design of T Stryjeński. There is also a statue of the Virgin Mary with the Child.
There was also an artificial grotto with a statue of Neptune in the Park.
After the war, the preserved farm quadrangles housed various institutions.
Presidium of the Communal National Council (liquidated in 1962)
The Delivery Room (still functioning in the 1960s)
Communal Cooperative Peasant Self-Help (since 1967),
Agricultural Circle (since 1969)
Dairy Cooperative (since 1971)
In 1990 the property was transferred to the Alwernia Commune.
2002 the property was purchased by a private owner.
CURRENT STATE:
The residential part of the Poręba Żegota Palace and Park Complex was a palace building with a complex of outbuildings grouped around a courtyard.
The courtyard has an outline similar to an elongated rectangle with an entrance gate on the axis, closed from the north by the body of the Palace. The buildings of the left and front outbuildings have been preserved in their entirety. The remaining buildings that are part of the Palace Complex were completely destroyed after the fire in 1945 and are now picturesque ruins.
Along the southern border of the palace and park complex, a fragment of the fence with gate openings and a trace of the fence wall have been preserved – the ruins of foundations stretching to the south-eastern corner of the plot. The preserved fragment of the fence consists of plastered brick posts covered with plastered hip roofs and brick spans up to a height of about 1.35 m.
The openwork filling of the spans above as well as the gates have not survived.
The property as a natural monument is under the protection of the Conservator of Monuments.
Feel free to contact me
Dawid Pajerski
dawid.pajerski@
In the case of this offer, the remuneration of our agency is covered by the property owner.
The description of the offer contained on the website is prepared on the basis of the inspection of the property and information obtained from the owner, may be subject to update and does not constitute an offer specified in Article 66 et seq. of the Civil Code.
Offer sent from the ASARI CRM (asaricrm.com) program for real estate agencies
in Poręba Żegota, Alwernia municipality with a rich history, which can be extended and new pages can be saved
on its pages.
A component of the offer is a ready-made project for the reconstruction and expansion of the entire Palace Complex. The property can be used for various types of services, where the location, history, size of the area, and the entire design documentation are a huge added value of the offer and can constitute a large part of the investment success.
Usable area in variant 1 - 6443.23m2
Plot area: 5.7445ha
A beautiful landscape park, which covers an area of about 4 ha.
The property consists of cadastral plots No. 469 and 470.
Designation in the current Local Spatial Development Plan
Approx. 1.5ha is located in the area of 30U- Service development areas
Approx. 20ar is located in the area 08MN/U-Single-family residential development areas with services
3.9898ha is located in the area 05ZP- Landscaped green areas
Covering the area and parameters of the facility:
Mausoleum:
Footprint area: 44.33m2
Total area: 44.33m2
Usable area: 24.56m2
Cubic volume: 255.34m3
Historical outline:
The present Palace and Park Complex was built in several stages between the end of the 17th century and the beginning of the 20th century, when it was rebuilt by architect Tadeusz Stryjeński.
According to the descriptions of the manor house, in the years in the extreme, southern wing there was then a "fortified chapel", in the outline preserved to this day.
It was three-level, with a ladder to the basement and an entrance to the upper floor via external spiral stairs. Built on a plan similar to a square, it is made of stone.
The Koryciński Manor – XVII century
the construction of the seat could be dated with great caution to the beginning of the seventeenth century.
This team probably did not differ significantly from the preferred solutions of the time
in the residences of the middle-class nobility, bears all the valuable typicalities codified in slightly later treatises and building manuals.
First half of the eighteenth century – Morstin's Palace
The seat enters the new century in a deplorable technical condition. The next owner was forced to carry out thorough renovations and modernization of the entire complex.
In 1740, the name of the seat appears for the first time as a palace with a courtyard.
The second half of the eighteenth century – the Szembek Palace
Aleksander Szembek, chamberlain of King Stanisław August, takes over his mother's inheritance and begins to build a residence worthy of his family on a grand scale.
In 1782 the new one received the king in a new, magnificent palace.
A certain modification of the park's décor was carried out at the end of the 19th century, replacing the clearing in front of the palace with tennis courts surrounded by flowerbeds.
The circular lawn on the driveway was planted with thujas and acacias.
The interiors of the Szembek Palace were full of souvenirs of the past. The main decoration and wealth was the famous library with Gdańsk furniture or portraits of ancestors.
In the palace, burned down in 1945 and partially demolished, there was a valuable library and rich art collections.
The mausoleum of the Szembek family, which is a part of the property
was built in 1921 according to the design of T Stryjeński. There is also a statue of the Virgin Mary with the Child.
There was also an artificial grotto with a statue of Neptune in the Park.
After the war, the preserved farm quadrangles housed various institutions.
Presidium of the Communal National Council (liquidated in 1962)
The Delivery Room (still functioning in the 1960s)
Communal Cooperative Peasant Self-Help (since 1967),
Agricultural Circle (since 1969)
Dairy Cooperative (since 1971)
In 1990 the property was transferred to the Alwernia Commune.
2002 the property was purchased by a private owner.
CURRENT STATE:
The residential part of the Poręba Żegota Palace and Park Complex was a palace building with a complex of outbuildings grouped around a courtyard.
The courtyard has an outline similar to an elongated rectangle with an entrance gate on the axis, closed from the north by the body of the Palace. The buildings of the left and front outbuildings have been preserved in their entirety. The remaining buildings that are part of the Palace Complex were completely destroyed after the fire in 1945 and are now picturesque ruins.
Along the southern border of the palace and park complex, a fragment of the fence with gate openings and a trace of the fence wall have been preserved – the ruins of foundations stretching to the south-eastern corner of the plot. The preserved fragment of the fence consists of plastered brick posts covered with plastered hip roofs and brick spans up to a height of about 1.35 m.
The openwork filling of the spans above as well as the gates have not survived.
The property as a natural monument is under the protection of the Conservator of Monuments.
Feel free to contact me
Dawid Pajerski
dawid.pajerski@
In the case of this offer, the remuneration of our agency is covered by the property owner.
The description of the offer contained on the website is prepared on the basis of the inspection of the property and information obtained from the owner, may be subject to update and does not constitute an offer specified in Article 66 et seq. of the Civil Code.
Offer sent from the ASARI CRM (asaricrm.com) program for real estate agencies