The main part of the exhibition consists of buildings forming a small open-air museum (about 2 ha). All of them are characteristic examples of traditional rural architecture, occurring in the Gorlice Foothills. At present, one can see, among others, cottages, farm buildings and rural workshops from Gródek, Siary, Kryg and Moszczenica. Most come from the 19th century, the oldest from the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries, and the youngest from the inter-war period. Buildings are of log construction, with walls made of wooden logs or half-timbering, less frequently of expanded wood, often with characteristic "log extensions" in the corners, covered with stepped straw roofs. The brown colouring of most of the buildings is disturbed by the lime whitewashed roof truss of one of the cottages, whereas the other one is decorated with ultramarine lime dots on the outside. Most of the buildings are developed, the interiors are furnished with original equipment from the end of the 19th century, the beginning of the 20th century and the inter-war period (furniture, dishes and clothes in the cottages, tools and equipment in the village workshops).
The good equipment of the workshops and cottages makes it possible to organize demonstrations of traditional crafts and rural activities (forging, weaving, turning earthenware, etc.). In the neighbourhood there is a wooden bourgeois manor house moved from Gorlice, where you can see a permanent exhibition presenting the manor house tradition in the Podgórze Gorlickie.