After a period of decline, the villa was purchased in 1951 by the Perocco di Meduna family, who renovated it and still own it today.
The villa consists of a monumental central block flanked horizontally by two porticoed barchesse, intended to house the servants, which are arranged in an entirely symmetrical position.
At its centre, the façade contains four Ionic semicolumns and a triangular tympanum; this neo-Palladian motif is presumably an 18th-century addition, as are the sections which connect the main block to the two barchesse.
The frescoes contain extraordinary depictions of episodes of ancient Roman history, and the ensemble is certainly one of the greatest examples of Baroque pictorial decoration in the Veneto.
Very remarkable is the original architecture of the public/private oratory, dedicated to the Madonna of Loreto, detached from the villa and facing the front road.