The manor in Topoľčianki is today a museum and a hotel - a well-preserved classicist manor from an older castle and surrounded by a large English park. Today it serves as a museum with a well-preserved period interior, a castle library and collections of ceramics and porcelain. In 1970, it was declared a national cultural monument.
The mansion stands on the site of a Gothic water castle and a later Renaissance fortress, which was significantly rebuilt in the 16th and 17th centuries. At the beginning of the 19th century, the southern wing was demolished and replaced by a representative, classicist building with a massive dome. The new, classicist manor house provided luxurious spaces.
The modern and well-maintained castle became the summer residence of the Habsburgs in 1890, but also the president of the republic after the creation of Czechoslovakia.
The classicist wing now houses a museum of historic furniture and home accessories, including carpets, embroidered oriental curtains, paintings, ceramics, clocks and weapons. All exhibits were left here by the last owners - Archduke Jozef August Habsburg and his wife Augusta, granddaughter of Emperor Franz Joseph I, when they left in October 1918. In the 1950s, the exhibits were moved to salons according to the same style and historical period, resulting in purely Renaissance, Baroque, Rococo , classicist and Biedermeier expositions. A large English-style park is part of the manor complex.
The complex also includes a riding school with the famous breeding of horses in the national stud.