The Vojnič-Sienažecki Palace and Park Complex (also known as the Chalecki Manor) is a monument of classicist architecture completed in the early 19th century in the village of Chalč, Vietka District, Belarus (the former estate of the Chalecki family) on the right bank of the river Sož.
In 1437, the village of Chalč was given by Grand Duke Švitrigaila to the Chalecki family, who built a church and a Jesuit monastery in the second half of the XVII century.
[1][3] During the anti-Russian January uprising of 1863, the owner of the estate Alexander Sienažecki hid Kalinoŭski insurgents in the manor house.
During the Soviet era, the estate served as a shelter for homeless children and later as an NKVD prison, where "enemies of the people" were incarcerated.
The cost of a complete restoration is estimated at Euro 2 million and the question of funding "remains open".