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By September, it will prepare an act to determine the restoration method of the damaged cultural heritage site and the amount of damage. Those who have caused damage will have to restore their status quo and compensate for the direct and indirect damage suffered by society. Otherwise, the Department may file a claim for damages.
According to the department, this is the only way, because there is no possibility of nationalizing the object acquired by a private person.
According to the department, the Czech manor in Ariogala was acquired by an Irish citizen in 2012, and since then he has not looked after the manor, he has not managed it, he has not maintained it, the building is currently disappearing.
According to heritage conservationists, the old mansion is in a state of emergency. Its windows and doors are open, unsealed, demolished bricks, deformation cracks in the walls, broken roof structures, dismantled floors, dilapidated brick masonry walls of the southwest facade, the plaster of the facade has fallen into many places and the decoration elements of the facade are disappearing rapidly.
The stately barn and park are also abandoned.
The Department of Cultural Heritage states that it has repeatedly tried to contact the House governor, an Irish citizen, but written requests to eliminate the violations and carry out oversight of the cultural heritage site did not reach the recipient. The Irish Department of Social Security and the country’s embassy in Lithuania were contacted but declined to provide data on the Irish citizen.
The department later appealed to the prosecutor’s office for the destruction of the cultural heritage site, but refused to apply public protection measures, and the police did not initiate a pre-trial investigation, arguing that there was no reason to find damage to the heritage site: lack of specific damage calculation, development and course. After calculating the damage, the department may go to court again.
Heritage conservationists hope to use every opportunity and means to find an Irish citizen, the administrator of the mansion, and to demonstrate their responsibility for the neglected and endangered cultural heritage site.
The lordship of Ariogala or Čekuva is believed to have been built in 1640. It expanded and flourished in the late 18th century, under the rule of the Šemetai family, where a vodka distillery and brick factory operated. After the 1863 uprising, the mansion was removed from Šemetai.
From 1940 to 1951, a high school operated here, and since 1963, the Ariogala Tuberculosis Hospital has been established in the mansion. When he got up, the manor, which became ownerless, began to quickly disappear.
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