The first evidence of the church dates back to 1177, when there was a chapel dedicated to St Andrew and subject to the Abbey of Santa Maria di Piave. It was in 1475 that it was subject to the church of Pieve.
It was only at the beginning of the 19th century, thanks to the intervention of Count Gerolamo Brandolini Rota, that the small and unadorned building was replaced by the present church with a single nave, in Neoclassical style. It became a parish church on 8 December 1856 and was consecrated to the Immaculate Conception by Bishop Manfredo Bellati on 24 October 1858. The frescoed ceiling was painted in 1859 by Giovanni Demin of Belluno. It depicts the Proclamation of the Dogma of the Immaculate Conception, with Pope Pius IX in the centre in the act of declaring the dogma and, higher up, bathed in divine light, Mary is depicted amidst a chorus of celebrating angels.
The bell tower, designed by architect Saon, was decorated with statues and equipped with a concert of bells cast by the De Poli foundry in Ceneda.