The buildings on Prymasa Stefana Wyszyńskiego Street are the property of the Metropolitan Curia and the seat of the Archbishop of Lublin.

Located opposite of the entrance gate, the Bishop Palace was erected in the 2nd half of the XVIII century for the Łańcuchowski family. In 1933 it was re-built according to the design by Jerzy Siennicki and it was then that the four-column portico was added to the structure. The adjacent XVII century Consistory Palace belonged to the wife of the Lublin Chorąży – Zofia Suchodolska. In the years 1817-1822, a "Wolność Odzyskana" ("Freedom Regained") masonic lodge had its headquarters here. Later the buildings housed a post office and a criminal court. The complex has been functioning as the seat of the Metropolitan Curia since 1852. A statue of The Primate of The Millennium, Stefan Wyszyński, is situated in the courtyard. In the years 1946-1948, Wyszyński was the Bishop of Lublin.