In the western part of the village, by the Danube embankment, stands a manor that was probably built in the second half of the 18th century by the Missics family.
In the first half of the 19th century, this estate passed into the hands of the Koller family, from whom the large estate was bought by the landowner Fridmann. In 1890, the manor and estate were bought from him by Sándor Szarvassy, who had the building renovated and remodelled in romantic style in 1894. The original park next to the manor was enlarged. After him, the building was owned until 1942 by his son Imre Szarvassy. Since 1959, the remodelled and heightened building has housed a Secondary Vocational School.
It was originally a single-storey building on an L-shaped plan. On the eastern side of the main wing stood a single-storey water tower crowned with a baluster parapet. The gateway into the courtyard and the western entrance façade were designed in the same manner. The main nine-bay façade was articulated by rectangular windows in surrounds with window cornices featuring keystones. The central three-bay projection had windows with semicircular tops and was itself crowned by a straight gable. The corners of the building were emphasised by bossage. Through the last reconstruction and the addition of an upper floor, along with later annexes, the building completely lost its original appearance. Preserved in what remains of the original park are a sculpture of a peasant woman — the work of Szarvassy’s sister-in-law —, the stone rim of a former fountain bearing reliefs of the four seasons, and part of the structure of a former pergola. Next to the mansion stands a similarly-designed building that housed the apartments of the estate administrator and the servants; in the upper-storey projection Imre Szarvassy kept the instruments of a meteorological station. In the courtyard next to the manor, part of the original wrought-iron fencing with its gate has been preserved.