Palace in Ulina

monuments

Neoclassical palace erected in the second half of the 19th century, at the initiative of Edmund Vogel, the owner of a nearby glassworks. In 1924, commissioned by the then owners, the Lietzau family, the residence was expanded, giving it a modern shape and a pastel-colored facade. A two-story palace was built, originally constructed on a rectangular plan, covered with a high mansard roof with numerous dormers and eyebrow windows. The proportions of the main building's mass are softened by asymmetrical annexes, verandas, wings, and an extreme avant-corps, giving the whole a harmonious appearance. Surrounded by a park, the palace stands amidst greenery, separated from the outside world by a fence. The history of the palace dates back deeply into the past, reaching as far as 1437 when Ulinia is mentioned as an agricultural settlement. After about two centuries, this land belonged to the von Krokow family from the Osieki line. In 1804, the estate was acquired by the chamberlain Franz von Somnitz, but later the owners often changed. In 1865, the new owner became Edmund Vogel, who began the history of the palace, which later passed into the hands of the Lietzau family. In 1928, 158 hectares of land were divided and divided into ten separate farms.

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