The bunker system of Lovászi was built in the '50s during the Cold War, and it is currently in a ruines.
The wooden church of Magyarföld was built in 2010 upon the initative of Mayor Zoltán Rátóti.
The lavender fields were inaugurated in 2016. On the 1.5 hectare area 4,000 lavenders have been planted in the centre of the village.
Márokföld Nature Art Park is the first such park created in Hungary.
The Calvinist bellfry of Nemesnép was built in 1793 and is one of the most beautiful of such constructions in Hungary.
'Bürü' is a Southwest-Pannonian Hungarian folk word for the narrow traditional wooden bridges on which people of the village could pass the stream passing their houses; one of them is still in its original place and in good condition in Nemesnép.
The castle was built by the Szapáry family in the 18th century partly using the old fortifications in order to represent the noble family and as an economic and administrative centre.
The European buffalo is almost extinct in the whole continent as well as in Hungary, currently it can also be seen in reservoirs such as the Szécsisziget one.
The Szapáry Days is a small festival about the region held every year in Szécsisziget since 2004.
The protected water mill not only has an interesting exhibition presenting the history and functioning of water mills, but is also an extraordinary accomodation place as well.