Manor house in Falkenhain, Brandenburg, rebuilt around 1900 in classicist style.
Gutshaus Falkenhain is a privately owned manor house in Drahnsdorf-Falkenhain, Brandenburg, Germany, about 200 metres northeast of the church. This two-storey plastered building with a hipped roof was built for the von Flemming family in the late 18th century, remodelled around 1910–12, and altered again after 1947.
Gutshaus Falkenhain is a manor house in Drahnsdorf-Falkenhain, in Brandenburg, Germany, in the district of Dahme-Spreewald. It stands about 200 metres northeast of the village church and is described as a two-storey rendered building with a hipped roof. The estate house was originally built at the end of the 18th century for the von Flemming family. Around 1900, the manor developed into a castle-like residence in a classicist style. It was later rebuilt around 1910 to 1912 in the Neu-Biedermeier style, when a columned portal and a tower were added. After 1945, the tower on the west side was blown up, and after 1947 both the columned portal and the tower were removed. The site is listed as private property. After 1990, the building was used as a community room and youth club. The recorded owners and associated families include the builders, the von Flemming family, and in the 19th century Freiherr Otto Theodor von Manteuffel. The available description presents Gutshaus Falkenhain as a historic country estate building whose appearance changed significantly over time, from its late 18th-century origins through early 20th-century expansion and the later loss of prominent architectural features.