The place is interesting, worth a visit, there is probably even an opportunity to crawl into the basement (basement), but we were with the children and did not try it. The estate in Oboli has been mentioned in written sources since 1852. Looking at the ruins, one can only imagine how beautiful it used to be here. In addition to the house itself, the estate complex included outbuildings, outbuildings, the manager's house (now it is the museum of the Obol underground, I also advise you to visit it), a glacier, a stable, a park between the house and the river. Under the Grebnitskys, about a hundred people served here, the owners had a luxurious carriage with mirrored windows, a footman and six horses. Initially, the estate was one-story. The second floor of the estate was completed and later housed living quarters. The first floor was the main one: there was a beautiful living room with a grand staircase, a library, an office and other rooms. The estate also had a basement, which was used for household needs. The Grebnitsky estate complex was sold around 1886. The last and largest landowner of the estate, the royal nobleman from St. Petersburg, Yuli Yulievich von Amburger, used the estate as a summer residence. Since the autumn of 1924, the manor house housed a school for peasant youth. Since 1970, there has been a ceramic factory dormitory in the building. In the mid-1990s, the manor house was severely damaged by fire, only the walls with the four-column portico survived. The once beautiful manor complex, which survived the war and the revolution, ends its history due to the negligence of the layman. There is one detail that makes the estate more interesting, there is data in the archives (works by candidates of architecture, associate professors Zakharkina G. I. and Davidovich A. S.) that a passage was laid under the building to the village of Mostyshche on the opposite bank of the Obol River.
An abandoned building on the territory of a fairly large village. Once there was a beautiful place with a park on the riverbank. Now the park is only reminded of a row of trees among chaotic thickets. And the building itself is gradually turning into construction debris.
It's a beautiful place. The building is in disrepair, it is not recommended to go inside.
Nearby there is a museum of partisans, where the guide Yuri will tell in detail and interestingly about the events of the Great Patriotic War and the exploits of partisans and fighters of the Red army.