• Bust of
Ignacy Jan Paderewski (1988). Stands at the entrance to the park. Founded by Janina and Zbigniew Porczyńscy. • Dancer (1926, by
Stanisław Jackowski). Situated in the rose garden. Sculpture of a young women dancing in ecstasy. • Bathing woman (1929, by Olga Nieniewska). Situated on a small hill by the lake. Sculpture of a bathing woman. • Monument to
Edward Mandell House (1932, by Franciszek Black, Reconstructed by
Marian Konieczny). House, the most trusted advisor of the American President Thomas Woodrow Wilson, advocated Poland's independence after World War I. The original sculpture was founded by Ignacy Jan Paderewski. The monument survived the World War II, yet was destroyed in 1951. • Monument to the Red Army Soldiers (15 September 1946). Originally built over a grave of twenty six Soviet soldiers, killed between 10 and 15 September 1944
during the heavy fighting in the area. In 1968,
the bodies were buried in a cemetery and the monument relocated to its present location. After 1989, it was devastated and restored on multiple occasions. Despite Russia's protests, the monument was demolished in October, 2018. • Monument to British pilots (1988). Situated in the rose garden near the dancer's sculpture. It commemorates the death of British pilots whose Consolidated B-24 Liberator was shot down by the Germans on 13 August 1944 during the Warsaw Uprising, and crashed on this site. It was unveiled in 1988 by Margaret Thatcher in the presence of Sergeant Henry Lloyd Lane, the only survivor of the crash. • Monument for Polish - Victims of the
September 11 attacks (2002). The monument is established for the Polish victims during the attack on New York City, and was unveiled by Polish President
Aleksander Kwaśniewski in 2002, on the 1st anniversary of the attacks. ==Other interesting objects==