Villa Wassermann is an 18th century complex located in Giavera del Montello, in a green area at the foot of Montello. Built by the Meneghetti family, it changed its purpose and shape several times; initially built to support agricultural activity, during the twentieth century it became a splendid holiday home. Its history begins in 1752, when the Meneghetti family purchased the oratory from the Carthusian friars. The villa passed into the hands of the Vianello Chiodo family, then the Galanti family. It took the name Wassermann following the marriage between Elsa Vianello-Chiodo (Letizia) and Wassermann, a Lombard industrialist who owned the then famous pharmaceutical company.
From an architectural point of view, the central building is characterized by simple lines of three floors with rectangular windows; on the main floor there is a central balcony while the surrounding areas of the villa are nineteenth-century renovations which were used as a warehouse and garage. The main building and the one for purely agricultural use give the idea of a unique construction, precisely because of the simplicity of the composition. To the south there is the caretaker's house and, not to be forgotten, the oratory, contemporary with the villa and which stands near the entrance gate. It was named after the Madonna della Salute in 1836, following the cholera epidemic that hit the Alta Marca Trevigiana. Inside, there is a statue of the Madonna of fine workmanship and two crucifixes dating back to 1700.
Since 2007 the villa has been owned by the Municipality of Giavera and hosts multiple socio-cultural activities (exhibitions, events and training courses).