House number 113 was built in the second half of the 18th century; one of its wooden boards bears an inscription dating from 1758. The two-storey house has a rectangular floor plan. There is a dooryard on the ground floor and
a courtyard gallery on the first floor. The windows are simple, double-winged, flanked with a plain wooden architrave; they also have a triangular attachment in the upper part. The entrance to the house leads through
an original Classicist door. Building reconstructions took place in the second half of the 20th century. For example, the original roofing material slate plates was replaced with bituminous roofing, and the windows of the room on the ground floor were changed. The interior of the house was adapted for use as an inn in the mid-19th century.
House number 220 was built in 1820. The building is exceptional for its almost all-timbered features and
well-preserved unique timber structure and gable. The staircase leading to the front door was added in the second half of the 19th century. Originally, there was a scullery in the cottage, and the interior walls used to be from reed.