10 m high, with two floors, built with roughly squared ashlars, with an irregular base: a pity that it is in decay and in a state of total abandonment. The second floor has collapsed and the ground floor is sometimes cross-shaped, sometimes barrel-shaped. The perimeter walls have large empty holes which suggest that there were external views; the internal divisional walls have some jambs. In the interior, in a corner, there is a large hearth with a hint of a hood and in a compartment a series of niches, probably mangers. From an uncertain period, perhaps 16th century, it cannot be attributed to a precise origin and location, but due to the absence of defensive elements and the presence, next to the main structure, of a millstone to press the grapes, it is supposed that it had rather than a defensive function, it had a residential, occasional function, obviously, and for agricultural reasons, as a support for the wine business.