Further to the east, not far from the Church of the Virgin Mary, by the Danube embankment, stands an outwardly unassuming building whose history nevertheless deserves attention.
After the destruction of the Nedeczky manor, Count Ferenc Gyulay had a two-storey Baroque mansion built on approximately this site after 1710, one worthy of a prince (according to Helischer). The mansion was later inherited by his son Ferenc II. Gyulay. In the last quarter of the 18th century, József Benedek Kondé had a single-storey Classicist manor built on the site of the demolished mansion. He acquired the local estate through his marriage to Franciska Ujlaky, whose mother was Ilona Nedeczky, married to Ferenc Ujlaky. According to Helischer, the building met all the requirements of comfortable living. The manor grounds were enclosed by a fence. Next to the building, a small ornamental park was established, which Kondé continually enriched with new exotic and rare trees. After his death in 1831, the manor passed into the hands of the Nedeczky family, who gave it to Károly Palkovics. In 1893, the manor and estate passed to the Bakay family, and in 1904 it was sold to Labud Koszticsy, who had become entangled in a conspiracy against the Tsar and therefore fled from Yugoslavia to Hungary. He had the building extended with a side wing, giving it a U-shaped ground plan. In 1935, Michal Hroššo, originally from Kuzmice near Topoľčany, bought the estate and manor. The estate and manor were confiscated from him in 1949 and transferred to the local State Farm. In 1990, the Hroššo family recovered the estate and building through restitution, but since the new administrative building was completed, the building has been empty.
The manor is a simple single-storey building on a U-shaped plan without any architectural details, yet its overall layout betrays its Classicist origin.