The villa stands on a promontory in the Calcare district, offering visitors a panoramic view of the hills of the Sicilian hinterland. Expanded during the 19th century with the addition of an eclectic Neo-Gothic baglio beside the classically inspired building, it features a Pompeian red façade punctuated by large balconies and stone medallions from Sabucina, attributed to local craftsmen.
Listed since 1990 by the Superintendence for Cultural Heritage as a property of historical and artistic value, the villa underwent a conservation restoration in 2007 that restored its former splendor, recovering stuccoes, wooden fixtures, and the interior halls once animated by the festivities and receptions of the Nisseno nobility.
Today, the villa—with its Italian-style gardens and paved courtyards framed by the greenery of Mediterranean scrub—hosts cultural events, weddings, and initiatives of the Constantinian Order of Saint George.