The Pelliccioni Palace, today private property, has a long façade, extending over three floors, each of which has a long row of windows.
There are smaller doors next to the main portal which lead into rooms, today used as artisan workshops.
The palace architecture is of particular interest as are the decorations and frescoes of several rooms on the piano nobile (first floor), which date to the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, but were heavily retouched in later times,
































