Many structures related to the fort can be seen in the Modlin district, including ruins from defensive structures designed by Napoleon Bonaparte[2] and Tsarist Blocks built between 1899 and 1901 to house soldiers of the Russian army, and which are still in use as private flats today.
[4] Holocaust survivor Yehudis Pshenitse has recounted the efforts of a parish priest from Nowy Dwór to save her life after the murder of more than 2000 Jews in Rembertów ghetto in August 1942.
"[5] The Israeli city of Holon has a Nowy Dwór Street (רחוב נובידבור).
Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki is also renowned for its wooden architecture, which is still faintly visible within the city limits.
The name Nowy Dwór itself, which literally means "New Manor" in English, relates to the manor-like architecture of the region.