Paulinum Palace
Local name: Pałac Paulinum
Located on a hill, a three-storey palace in an eclectic style today houses a luxury hotel with SPA, restaurant and conference center. Concerts and exhibitions are organized in the palace rooms. The interiors still retain their original decor and the unique atmosphere of a 19th-century residence.
The building with terrace layout, with numerous towers and bay windows and irregularly scattered windows is surrounded by a large, well-kept park. The magnificent residence was founded in the nineteenth century on the farm, surrounded by a landscape park. The initiator of its construction was the then owner, factory owner Richard von Kramst. The palace received its final shape in 1906 after the reconstruction carried out by Oscar Carlo.
In 1931, after his death, the building was purchased by the German Labor Front, which organized a training center for NSDAP. The residence survived without major damage during World War II. In 1945, in the Polish Jelenia Góra, the palace became the largest state storehouse of Lower Silesian works of art. In later years, the palace was transformed into an officer's casino for a nearby military garrison. Today, the building is a real decoration of Jelenia Góra.