Szuster Palace in the Morskie Oko Park

Pałacyk Szustra

The Szuster Palace (also known as the Lubomirski Palace) is a palace in Warsaw at 2 Morskie Oko Street in the Morskie Oko Park (literally Sea Eye Park) in the borough of Mokotów. It is the seat of the Stanisław Moniuszko Musical Society in Warsaw.
In 1772–1774, on the spot of the destroyed manor once owned by Burbach, a merchant, Efraim Szreger built a classicistic single-storey square-plan villa-cum-palace for Duchess Izabela Lubomirska, née Czartoryska. The garden layout was designed by Szymon Bogumił Zug. The manor was named Mon coteau <.i>(French for "my hill"). The manor's outbuildings and the garden did not survive to this day; the only remaining structures are a tower with a dovecote and a Flemish gloriette (a Mauritanian house), which are today located at the frontage of Puławska Street.
In 1776, Zug converted the eastern façade of that building, and after the manor was bought by Franciszek Szuster in 1845, some other architectural changes in the neo-Gothic style were made by Henryk Marconi, including the addition of a new two-storey outbuilding in the western part of the palace. Another conversion, this time in the neo-Renaissance style, was conducted in 1852 thanks to Adam Idźkowski.
During World War II, the Germans cut down the park almost completely, and the palace itself was burnt down in 1944. Nationalised after the war, the palace was rebuilt in 1962–1965 based on a design by Jerzy Brabander.