Today, the village is attached to Snědovice municipal authority. Střížovice underwent a boom in the late 19th century when 239 residents lived in 50 houses. Today, 95 residents live there.
In the centre of Střížovice village square is St. Prokop chapel built in 1878 - 1879 by F. Jandausch, the constructor, according to a design by Wenzel Nademlensky from Hoštka, in the pseudo-Renaissance style. Opposite the chapel, on the southern part of the village square and next to the bus station, there is a sandstone sculpture of St. Jan Nepomucký dated 1864. Behind the sculpture, is a house with Empire decoration and a relief of the Trinity in the gable triangle. Next to the side wall of the bus station is a stone monument commemorating the end of World War II. According to the architecture, it is probably a monument to the soldiers who died in World War I where the original German text has been replaced by the Czech caption: In memory of liberation by the famous Red Army and Czechoslovak heroes 9 May 1945. There are many beautiful houses in Střížovicích, mostly dating back to the 19th century, formerly opulent farming homesteads, bricked and stoned with ornamental facades and there are also plain cottages with semi-timbered or simple timbered walls. There are only a few residents; °the vast majority are used by holiday cottage dwellers who have adapted the buildings for a new lifestyle different from that they were originally intended for.