
Biebrowo - a one-storey manor house with an attic and a two-storey risalit in the garden façade built in the latter half of the 19th century. Former farm labourers live in the building. The nearby park is unkempt and destroyed but some grand oaks and hornbeams are still growing there.
Borkowo Lęborskie - a one-storey manor house from the latter half of the 19th century, surrounded by a park. Private property. A destroyed family tomb of the former owners – von Tessmar.
Borkówko - a one-storey manor house erected at the beginning of the 20th century, surrounded by a park with single linden trees, common oaks and thujas. Private property under renovation for many years now.
Choczewko - a 19th –century farm complex. It includes a manor house with a high basement from 1888, a granary and the remains of a park. Owned by a State Treasury Agency, at present on lease.
Choczewo - a palace in Art Nouveau style built at the close of the 19th century, located in the middle of a trim park and at the end of the avenue of monumental chestnut trees. Nowadays it houses a primary school unit, the library and Social Services Centre. The beautiful old trees are the proof that the park is much older than the palace itself and that earlier it had sheltered the manor houses built here by the Jackowski, the Fölkersamb and the Wejher families. The nearby outbuilding and a fragment of the wall fencing the park are the remnants of the old land estate. Some of the palace’s rooms may be seen on weekdays, whereas the park is open to public any time.
Ciekocinko - a former manor farm complex (according to some sources it belongs to Ciekocino) comprising a palace built in 1920, an estate manager’s house, living quarters for farm labourers, a distillery dating back to the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries and a park. Currently it is being converted by its owner into an international horse riding centre.
Ciekocino - a small former evangelical church dedicated to St Peter and St Paul from 1891. The churchyard with German gravestones dating back to the 19th century.
Gardkowice - a residential complex from the beginning of the 20th century. A multi-storey manor house, living quarters for farm labourers, farm buildings and a small park surrounded with a wall. Private property.
Gościęcino - a one-storey manor house erected in the latter half of the 19th century surrounded with a trim park. A maple tree avenue leads to the building. At present, it is an agro-tourism farm called Dworek pod Lipami.(Manor House under Linden Trees)
Jackowo - an old family residence of the Jackowski family. In the 19th century, the subsequent owners converted the old manor house into a three-wing palace laid out on a letter H plan. Private property.
Kurowo - a manor farm complex comprising a one-storey manor house erected in 1870, a distillery, farm buildings from the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries and a small park founded at the beginning of the 20th century. The manor house is in private hands at present.
Lubiatowo - a manor house built in place of an old one in the mid-19th century. It is surrounded by a park with 300-year-old yews. During WW II the farm was the seat of a German Employee Service camp and nowadays it holds the offices of District Coastline Protection Service of Marine Board in Gdynia.
Lublewko - a former manor farm complex dating back to the mid-19th century comprising a two-wing manor house and a long outbuilding with a characteristic row of 12 spire lights. In both buildings some families live. Farm buildings and several old trees in the nearby park are but remains of the manor farm. The estate is managed by Brood Animals Breeding Farm with the seat in Prusewo.
Lublewo - a manor farm complex from the latter half of the 19th century comprising a manor house, two storehouses, a forging shop and a beautiful park with old trees. The residents of the house are the employees of the local plant breeding unit.
Łętowo - a manor house from the beginning of the 20th century built on the foundations of the former one. It is surrounded by monumental trees among which one may discern the white poles of a festive gate. Owned by State Treasury; currently on lease.
Osieki Lęborskie - the Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary the Sea Star erected before 1740 on the foundations and crypts of a 12th-century temple which was burnt down in 1726. Mostly late Baroque interior décor, however, the Regency style pulpit and the 14th –century baptismal font are older. In the crypt below the church are the remains of the former owners of this manor farm – von Krockow. In the churchyard one may find a few 19th-century gravestones and a small chapel made of field stone. A former manor farm complex with the only remaining parts being stables, cowsheds and a huge granary in neo-Romanesque style.
Przebendowo - a mid-19th century manor house surrounded by a park. Private property, partially leased to the University of Gdańsk. It holds the Bird Migration Research Unit. An evangelical graveyard with German and Kashubian gravestones from the 19th century.
Sasino - a Neoclassical palace from 1868 surrounded by a trim park. At present it serves as a holiday centre.
Słajkowo - a residential complex comprising a 19th-century manor house, a small park and a barn. Private property.
Starbienino - an Italian-style manor house from the latter half of the 19th century, surrounded by an old park, ponds and romantic alleys. In 1995, it was transferred to the Kashubian Folk University which runs the Ecological Education Centre.
Stilo - a lighthouse erected in the years 1904-1906 on the sand dune in the vicinity of Osetnik village near Sasino. An oval metal tower which is 34m tall. It is open to visitors from 10am to 6pm in the summer.
Zwartowo - a palace from the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. It is the property of the Ministry of Justice, which opened “Relax” holiday centre on the premises. The residential complex also comprises a two-wing outbuilding with arcades, built in 1904, as well as farm buildings and stables. All of these are well integrated into surrounding gardens with ponds and an old park. St Joseph Church from 1889 with a slight neo-Gothic character and a tower topped with an unusual pyramidal cupola.
Żelazno - a manor farm complex dating back to the late 19th century comprising a Neoclassical manor house, a park with old trees and a few farm buildings, e.g. a forging shop. It is owned by the State Treasury; however, at present it is leased to a company with foreign capital. A small former evangelical graveyard with a neo-Gothic mausoleum of the former owners- the Milczewski family.

























