The adjacent cloister was partially razed in the early 19th-century,[4] and during the 19th century, the church was attached to initially Salesian nuns, then the order of Stimatini.
The cloisters and the Chapel of the House of Loreto were also destroyed in the aerial bombardment of April 6, 1945.
The original facade, seen inside the narthex reveals the unusual Romanesque construction, mixing stones, mortar, and brick, in alternating layers.
At the rear of the church, the tall square belltower, also striped with stone and brick, has three arched windows near the roofline, and the roof is cone with three corner pinnacles.
[6] Among the main works: a sculpture of the Trinity by Enrico di Rigino; a Trinità in maestà; an Annunciation by Martino da Verona; Apostles by Giacomo da Verona, and frescoes by the Brusasorzi; canvases by Jacopo Ligozzi, Domenico and Felice Brusasorzi, and Giovanni Battista Caliari.