Ordinary buildings in Belynichi
Although Belynichi has a rich history and in the past played an important role in the life of the region, only a small amount of evidence of the former greatness of the city has survived to this day. Many iconic places burned down during a fire in the middle of the XIX century, and in the 1960s the Church of the Mother of God and the Carmelite monastery were destroyed by the Soviet authorities. Thanks to the famous Belarusian-Polish artist Napoleon Orda, who immortalized the famous Carmelite monastery in one of his paintings in the second half of the XIX century, we can enjoy the greatness of the temple through the centuries. The main shrine of the former Carmelite monastery, the Belynich Icon of the Mother of God, was lost during the Great Patriotic War. In the modern church in honor of the icon of Our Lady of Belynich, a copy of the famous miraculous icon is kept. 

Residents of the city keep the memory of Vitold Kaetanovich Belynitsky-Birul - a famous countryman, an outstanding Belarusian artist whose paintings are known far beyond the borders of the republic. The Belynichi Regional Art Museum named after V. K. Byalynitsky-Biruli, in addition to paintings by the People's Artist of the BSSR and RSFSR, presents works by Belarusian and foreign artists, sculptors. The museum can also interest visitors with interesting objects of weaving: bedspreads, tablecloths, towels with embroidery elements and lace made by local folk craftsmen.

The Brovar building has been preserved in Belynichi (now the church of Evangelical Christians is located in the building), buildings of ordinary buildings of the late XIX - early XX centuries, and only part of the former homestead of the Oginsky XVIII century has been preserved.

Date of construction of ordinary buildings: late XIX—early XX centuries. After the revolution, this part of the building was entirely occupied by a bank, after the war there was a post office on the 2nd floor, a Savings bank on the 1st. Until 2000, another 2-storey building (in the form of the letter "G") adjoined the building from the south-eastern side, before the revolution there were shops and workshops in it. after the revolution, the post office occupied 2 floors of the annex, and after the war this part was in disrepair for 50 years. It was destroyed in 1999-2000 .

Today there is a cafe on the 2nd floor of the remaining part of the building, Shops on the 1st.