Small manor in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern with outbuildings and wide scope for development between Schwerin and Müritz.
10 km southwest of Goldberg and about 20 km northeast of Parchim lies the former monastery estate of Mühlenhof. First mentioned in 1417, Mühlenhof came into the possession of the Dobbertin monastery as early as 1429. After the dissolution of the Dobbertin monastery in 1919, Mühlenhof became a state domain and was then administered as state property by the Lübz-Marnitz Landdrostei. In 1921 the 390 ha estate was leased to Ernst Flindt, a district court judge from Neustadt-Glew.
In 1866, the present single-story manor house was built with bricks from the monastery's own brickyard in Mestlin. The brick building of eight axes with a crippled hipped roof stands on a high basement made of fieldstones. On both sides, the attic was provided with dwarf houses in brick-lined half-timbering. The entrance is located on the former courtyard side with a stair landing in front. Only the cornices of the gables are decorated with brick moldings.
The dimensions of the manor house are 22 x 13m.
Behind the manor house there was a small, today hardly recognizable, manor garden with old beeches worth seeing.
Inside the house, some details from the building period have been preserved, such as shutters, stairs and floors. The house has been empty since 1990 and is in need of renovation. Some beams have been renewed and the structure has been structurally secured in parts, but there is a need for further action in the near future.
The property for sale also includes the small former reaper's barracks to the right of the manor house, which is also in need of renovation and measures 23 x 11m.