n the edge of the village there is a large hill and on it the ruins of a castle built of stone and partly of brick. The castle was erected on a quadrilateral plan with corner towers with a plan similar to a square. Only the ruins of the west wing, part of the south wing and two towers have survived to this day.
The first manor house was built here in the second half of the 16th century during the times of the Stadnicki family, it was made of brick. In the years 1627-1633, the existing complex
The walls of the south-west tower, photo by ZeroJeden, VIII 2001
was expanded and transformed into a castle. Subsequently, the ensemble passed through the hands of the Czartoryskis, the Ogińskis and then their heirs, Józef Antoni Podolski. In 1789, the village and the castle were bought by Piotr Starzeński, whose family lived in Dąbrówka until World War II. The castle in this period housed many works of art, as well as a rich library. In the second half of the nineteenth century, the family built a manor house using the eastern wing of the castle and adapted the towers for residential purposes.
In 1945, the buildings were blown up by a UPA unit and since then it has been falling into ruin.