This photo was taken on the first weekend of March 2024. Fraeylemaborg is located on an estate of over 23 hectares. The borg building originated more than seven centuries ago and received its current appearance at the end of the 18th century. The park, partly designed by G.A. Blum and L.P. Roodbaard, was laid out in English landscape style. Remnants of the formal Baroque layout were preserved, such as the characteristic central axis. In the forecourt is the treasure house, which now houses a restaurant. Opposite is the coach house, which houses the museum shop and exhibition rooms.
The park features 17th- and 18th-century sandstone garden ornaments.
The borg was founded in the Middle Ages as a stone house and grew into an imposing building with influential residents. The last residents, the Thomassen à Thuessink van der Hoop van Slochteren family, sold the borg to the Gerrit van Houten Foundation in 1972. After restoration, the Fraeylemaborg became a museum. The rooms show the era until the mid-20th century, the last phase of private occupation