The villa is located, surrounded by a high wall, at the foot of a hill, just beyond the road to Villabalzana. The main facade, facing south towards the countryside, consists of a long portico supported by fluted Tuscan pillars, over which there is, on the noble floor, a loggia marked by a continuous balustrade interrupted, in correspondence with the structural elements, by the plinths on which Tuscan columns rest; these, in turn, support, in correspondence with the attic, the attic finished with a short cornice and a protruding roof.
The seven intercolumni are of varying widths: the three central ones are narrower and the four lateral ones are wider; those of the portico are now enclosed by glass walls. Two overlapping arches open on both heads of the vault. On the west side, there is a slightly set-back barchessa of equal height, rhythmically punctuated by semicircular arches opening onto the portico. Behind the villa, to the north, is the garden, and a little to the east stands a small late eighteenth-century adjacent building with a portico of Tuscan columns. The main body dates back to the early 18th century, while the barchessa is a Neoclassical work.