A unique structure and a very respectable example of carpentry and carpentry with a history lasting more than a hundred years. Perhaps the only building in the territory of the district made of wood with such "experience" and a fairly good degree of preservation. Previously, it was part of the residential complex of buildings of the Ivanovsky estate. It's a pity that the years are taking their toll on the tree.
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K
Kaskevich Irina
Level 4 Local Expert
March 4
There was little information on this object, but here are the main points:
The manor house was built in 1935.
An architectural monument in the Zakopane style
This building is called "Vodeika's House" or "Valeika's House", but it was built by Yuri Ivanovsky. It was he who inherited half of Golovichpol in 1930, and the other half belonged to the Valeyka family. Later, Yuri built a new house on the site of the old, burnt-out wooden one. It was designed by the Belarusian architect Lyavon Vitan-Dubeykovsky (he also developed the so-called Belarusian style).
Simultaneously with the construction of the house, Jerzy Ivanovsky laid out a new garden on an area of 10 hectares, and, probably, the outbuildings near the house have been preserved since that time.
In Soviet times, the house became a school dormitory, and then became the property of the parish in Starye Vasiliski. It is used as the Catholic chapel of St. Casimir.
(Pre-1939 photos from Wikipedia)