The house has two floors with a mezzanine. The ground floor, a plinth on a stone foundation with square windows of the same size, was originally used for agricultural purposes. The façade of the second floor has five windows with rounded arches, while the third floor has only three. The central part of the frame, which is taller and has a prominent projection, seems to divide the building into three parts. The parade entrance with its staircase leading up to the From the staircase a park path and stairs lead to the lake. The palace is neo-Renaissance in style, with Irish-style window dressings. The buildings, which are already dilapidated but retain all their parts, were photographed around 1960 by Vitas Valatka, a member of the staff of the Telsiq Museum of Local History ( Figs. 5, 6; the author would like to thank Laimu- tei Valatkaene and Dan utei Mu kiene for giving him the opportunity to present these photos in the present publication) . The limestone used for the construction was taken from the manor's limestone hill at Rudel. The limestone is still standing today. In the days of the Lithuanian Republic, an old company had set up a butter storage facility here, because it was easy to get to and the sun did not heat up the old honey and it did not melt in the winter. Sklepkalnis, the Sprüdês Mound, a little further away - an environment that gives a special beauty to a landscape park. The park on the shore of the lake was formed in the 19th century a. late 20th - early 20th century. It contains fragments of the planned and spatial structure of the servants' quarters, especially in the southern part of the estate. The former grandeur of the manor and the splendor of the park are still recalled by the road that crosses the manor and the park from Pavandenês to Užvent. The park is dominated by groups and isolated native deciduous trees, and in the narrower part of the park, closer to the hill, there are fragments of ornamental shrubs. There used to be short paths for "promenades".