About the church

In 1793, King Stanislaw August Poniatowski granted the land plot with the tavern to the Lutheran community for permanent use. In 1912 the building was fundamentally reconstructed. Today it is a single-nave building with one tower with a pentagonal apse and sacristies. The square bell tower stands out. The bell has an inscription in Latin: "God sent his son". The main entrance through the tower is in the form of a large arrow-shaped portal with a rose window above it. Until 1944 the tower had a high spire. There is a clock mechanism made in 1913 in good condition, but it has been silent for more than 70 years.  

In 1912, Pastor Oswald-Adolf Plamsch built a yellow brick house next to the church, which is a vivid example of the transition from brick eclectics to Art Nouveau elements. In 1944 the building of the church was transferred to the regional archive, but the organ, furniture and chandeliers were lost. In 1995 the church and the pastor's house were returned to the Evangelist-Lutheran community of Grodno. At present the church is being actively restored and soon it will turn from a dilapidated building into a magnificent church with a hall for organ concerts. The organ will come from the community from the city of Frankfurt am Main.