The design of the villa dates back to 1753, when it was commissioned to the architect Giovanni Miazzi by Marcantonio Spineda de Cattaneis, an exponent of the Treviso nobility.
In the early twentieth century, senator Jacopo Gasparini set up a museum of African relics on the ground floor of the west barn, decorating the environment in a neo-Egyptian style.
[4] The complex, framed at the rear by the greenery of Montello, follows a symmetrical layout that sees the main body isolated in the center, two independent lateral barchesse and an adjoining chapel, characterized by a circular plan with a dome.
The large architectural complex is surrounded by a fish pond and a high wall, once decorated with frescoes, covered in the latest restoration.
To make the site even more spectacular, both to the north and to the south, a wide avenue of cypress poplars, used as a riding school, crossed the properties.