Nynäs, Manor estate in Tystberga, Sweden
Nynäs is a manor house in southern Sweden with stone buildings, furnished rooms, and ornate plaster ceilings dating to the 1680s. The property also includes an orangery, gardens, and adapted structures for visitor services.
The property was first recorded in documents from 1328 and remained in the hands of Swedish aristocratic families for centuries. Sörmland County acquired it in 1984 and opened it to the public.
The house displays how Swedish nobility lived, with furnishings, portraits, and textiles spanning different eras. The rooms show what objects and styles surrounded the family in their daily life.
An orangery houses a café and garden shop where visitors can relax and browse. The location sits about 30 minutes from the nearest larger town and offers accommodation in converted farm buildings.
The estate manages around 3,000 hectares of nature reserve land dotted with historical buildings like red worker cottages and craft workshops. These structures reveal how life was organized on a large Swedish country property.
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