The Chapel of the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary (Kronstädter kapelle, Maria Heimsuchung) stands on the ridge of the Eagle Mountains at an altitude of 1,035 meters. The shingled roof-covered building was built on a circular floor plan.
However, the first credible written mention of the chapel on the mountain ridge dates back to 1763. Even then, however, it was a wooden building, which - probably in the 1920s (or at the latest in the early thirties) - was replaced by a stone chapel. In the form - if we believe the correctness of the mapping for the needs of a stable cadastre (carried out in this area in 1840) - probably quite different from the current one. However, even the stone building soon lost its battle with wind, snow and frost. As early as 1860, it is described as dilapidated.
At the request of the owner of the Rychnov estate - Count Jan Kolowrat Krakovsky, who contributed financially to the construction (and donated building materials), the chapel was rebuilt in 1868-1869, or rather a new chapel was built on the site of the original one.
And in a not exactly traditional form: a relatively simple brick building was built on a (approximately) circular floor plan, from which only a covered entrance protrudes. It ends with a conical, thatched roof with a small cross mounted on top.
The first stone Kunštát Chapel was an important point during the first topographic and elevation measurements. The cadastres of the four original villages meet at the chapel: Velké Zdobnice, Malé Zdobnice, Černá Voda and Kunštát.