Palace of Countess Karolina DzembowskaXIX ct.

A monument of architecture of local importance (security number 56 M).

The palace of the Dzembowskis family was built at the foot of Khrestova Street in the second quarter of the 19th century in the pseudo-Gothic style. It was originally a two-storey building with an octagonal tower. A lithograph by Karl Arldt (mid-19th century) attests to the authentic appearance of the building. The author of the architectural project is Józef Hoffmann. An English-style park was planted in front of the manor house, and an orchard behind it. The tower was equipped with a spiral staircase leading to the observation deck.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the building was completed with two large educational buildings for the needs of a commercial school. Ukrainian composer Mykhailo Verikivskyi, the prominent resident of Kremenets,  studied here. Famous Ukrainian artists Tymofii Safonov and Andronyk Lazarchuk taught at the commercial school.

In 1920-1939, the building housed a municipal gymnasium with Polish as the language of education, and later it became a secondary school.

In the 1930s, an Art Deco portico was added to the central building according to a project of the Lviv architect Wawrzhyniets Daichak. The original layout of the building has not been preserved.

The building was used as a male secondary school No. 1, an agricultural school, and an agricultural college. In 1988, the former palace was converted into a secondary school No. 2 that still operates here today.