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The palace stands in the park, which was originally built in 1857 in the Neo-renaissance style by Apolinary Gajewski and then rebuilt for the new owner Stefan Mycielski in 1911 in the Neo-classical style by the architect Roger Sławski. The palace was burnt in 1945 and rebuilt in the years 1960-62 as a tourist hostel (without reproducing the antique interiors). The magnificent building has the projection of elongated rectangle and it is covered with the ridge roof, hidden behind the baluster attic. The front facade has been adorned with the six-column portico of pseudo - Ionic order closed with a triangular tympanum at the top. The tympanum has on its surface the shields with the coats of arms of Dołęga and Korzbok families.

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The palace park (17,76 ha) is laid by the Wolsztyńskie Lake. It was established on the turn of the XVII century in the vicinity of the palace. Primarily the park had regular foundation after which the linden alley and the line of elms in the Western side of the park have remained. At the moment the park has landscape features.

In the park there are many monumental trees, amongst other oaks of the circumference up to about 460 cm (the thickest one grows near the palace), beeches up to 360 cm in circumference, ashes up to 350 cm, a Canadian poplar of 520 cm and a Japanese gingko tree of 160 cm in circumference. Many of the park trees are wreathed by ivies.

 

On one of the oaks (about 450 cm in circumference, growing in north-western part of the park) the heads of Medusa and Faun were sculptured by Martin Rozek The boughs on which they were placed got withered, so the sculptures were transferred to the museum in 1994, and their copies were placed there instead.

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By the lake in the park there is a beach, a natural swimming pool, and a new magnificent platform.

The Wolsztyńskie Lake (124 ha in area), the smaller of the lakes over which Wolsztyn lies, has an elongated shape and the shore line of about 7475 m in length, most of which is afforested. The Dojca river flows through the lakes. In the Southern part there is a large peninsula (which is included in the area of the palace park), and an elongated, entirely afforested islet emerges in the middle of the reservoir (1,3 ha). The banks of the lake is the place of nesting of numerous rare and extinction - endangered species of birds, amongst others: the black tern (Chlidonias niger), the grebe (Podiceps nigricollis), the Remiz pendulinus, the blackhead (Aythia fuligula) and the mute swan (Cygnus olor).

 

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