It is the most historically important building in Turano and it is also the most architecturally significant, one of the most beautiful historic buildings in the Lodi area. It stands on the slope of the ancient Adda riverbed, where a castle once stood. With the advent of the Calderaris in Turano in 1675 they rearranged the old structure transforming it into a sumptuous country villa, with large decorated halls, a staircase leading to the upper floors with various rooms with large windows and doors and two balconies which give the possibility gaze out over the surrounding countryside and towards the internal courtyard.
Over the years the Palace changed hands to the Cima nobles and towards the end of the 19th century it was bought by the Lodigian Pitoletti. In 1900 it passed to the reverend Canossian Mothers, who used it as a boarding school for the daughters of wealthy people from Lodi; later they established an embroidery school attended by the girls of the village, later it was destined again by the Canossian Mothers to a female shelter for deaf-mutes and finally to an apprenticeship textile workshop open to local girls. In the mid-1980s due to the shortage of vocations, the remaining nuns were transferred and the Palace was put up for sale by the same religious Order and was purchased by a private company which began its restoration, bringing it back to the splendor we can admire today.