The villa, designed by engineer Baraggioli, was commissioned by Dr. Federico Demaria, head physician of the Ivrea hospital and built in 1897.
[2] Corso Costantino Nigra, along which the villa is located, was at that time one of areas concentrating the most development in town, as it was the artery that connected the historic city center to the Ivrea railway station via the Ponte Nuovo.
[3] During the Italian Civil War the villa served as the headquarters of the German forces stationed in Ivrea; however, the proximity of the residence to the railway bridge did not prevent the partisans from successfully sabotaging the bridge by blowing it up, thus interrupting the Chivasso–Ivrea–Aosta railway and saving the town from an almost certain Allied bombardment.
[3] In 1946, the Demaria family sold the property to Filippo Bertoletti, who owned an umbrella factory in Ivrea.
Unable to fulfill certain commitments, he had in turn to relinquish the property, which was then purchased by the Oderio family for their daughter Olga.