The Palace in the village of Palanechka is an architectural monument of Classicism. It is a two-storeyed palace with one-storeyed side wings. The central pediment has been lost. What makes the architecture of the palace unique is the window frames and six pillars decorated with herms – carved stone heads designed in antique style.
St. Virgin Mary Catholic Church was brick-built in the 18th century on the site of a Basilian monastery founded by Jan Kamiński, governor of Polack in 1640 (1632) which had been moved there from Monte-Cassino (Italy).
The church of the Holy Cross in the village of Gorodishche is a work of folk wooden architecture.
At one time, the Khadkievic family built a church on the western end of the settlement to honour St. George and to the east of the castle on the higest hill – a church in honour of the Holy Trinity. In the 17th century the Khadkievic family comverted to Catholicism and the Orthodox churches become deserted.
In 1823, on the outskirts of the village of Bolshaya Svorotva, where the road to Molchad starts, a triangular church with an entrance on each side was built of rubble stone and brick by Jacob Nezabytovsky. According to historians, the concept of the church was to have representatives of three Christian religions, Orthodox, Catholic and Uniate, pray at the same time, and the altar was in the middle of the prayer hall.
Novaya Mysh has been known as a residential estate on the Warsaw tract since the 16th century. At different times, it belonged to the families of Khadkievic, Siniavsky, Judzicky, Masalsky and Neselovsky.