The eighteenth-century building complex consists of a three-storey main body and lower side buildings which, with two towers, continue on the back, closing the service courtyard and acting as rustic annexes. In fact, the villa has a dual function being both the owner's stately home and the nerve center of the economic activity carried out in the neighboring lands. The main body, which is spread over three floors, is surmounted by a tympanum, enriched by the presence of the sculpted noble coat of arms of the De Concina family. The windows arranged symmetrically on the facade are delineated by stone shelves; in the center, three French doors with wrought iron balustrade light up the hall on the noble floor. The organization of the interior spaces re-proposes the typology of Venetian villas with a central hall, which the other rooms overlook. On the other hand, the presence of the stairwell at the bottom of the hall itself is singular. The villa has an entrance garden and a rear courtyard overlooking the park.