Colourful and modern
How important the ambient beauty and harmony are for the inner harmony and peace of mind we need for creative thought and deed! My heartfelt thanks! Excerpt from the guest book, MetallRente
Accommodation lovingly appointed down to the last detail, cheerful colours, a cosy atmosphere and functional style ensure that you'll feel at home here.
The spacious foyer with chandeliers and 2 modern sculptures form the heart of the Manor House.
A beautiful winter garden serves as recreation room; the library accommodates not only books and magazines, but also an audio entertainment system and games.
The estate had an eventful history before it once more became the focal point of the village and a representative location for events.
Scenes from history
Gremmelin is a two-storey building with nine axes and a hipped roof. The Manor House is built in the plain style, and although the original construction of 1800 and its subsequent annexes burnt down in 1928, it was rebuilt without delay in the old style.
Gremmelin is located east of Güstrow and is part of a larger estate that had been the property of the aristocratic von Oldenburg family since the XIV century.
The dynasty probably originated from Oldenburg, but chronicles trace its presence in Mecklenburg back to the XIII century.
Until the XVII century, Gremmelin remained in the family but then changed owners several times.
In 1803, the knighthood family von Pentz acquired Gremmelin and kept it in their possession until 1945.
Christian Graf von Pentz auf Neudorf was married to Sophie Elisabeth Gräfin von Schleswig-Holstein, a daughter from a collateral line of King Christian IV of Denmark. In the XVIII century, the extensive branching of the family came to an end. The Pentz family settled again in Mecklenburg and now devoted their time to breeding horses on the Gremmelin estate.
In 1995, Lutz Schaffhausen and his family acquired the house and, over the next three years, reconstructed it with loving care.