Church of St John of Nepomuk, as one of the few is making the observer astonished with its architecture
Church of John of Nepomuk, had originally the character of the chapel of the court, which was built on the same site by Suchodolscy in the first half of the eighteenth century, and then rebuilt many times. The building of the still existing Church begun in 1907 and was completed in 1909. During World War I the Church was vandalized and robbed. In the period between the wars the Church was equipped by the authorities with and altars and the organs. World War II brought a re-injury of the temple, which were removed after the liberation. The building is brick, with halls and the neo-gothic naves of equal width. From the west there is a rectangular porch above with a tower on a square plan rising with two side local walls. The presbytery is closed on three sides, surrounded by the bypass with the vestries. In the interior there is a starry vault. The divisions with the parietal pillars and pilaster strips. The equipment of the Church is uniform, gothic works of art woodcarving. On the side altar there is picture of the Virgin Mary from the end of the sixteenth century.