Villa Savorgnan was built in the 2nd half of the 1500s, and was the summer residence of the Savorgnan family and the jurisdictional seat of the fiefdom. The elegant villa with its multiple buildings houses an archaeological collection that mainly includes the remains of a small necropolis in use until the first decades of the 2nd century. After the 1976 earthquake, the villa was restored and is now used as a multipurpose cultural center and, since 1991, has also been the permanent exhibition venue for archaeological material from various periods (prehistory, protohistory, Roman, medieval, and Renaissance). The exhibits in the Villa Savorgnan come from the upper Spilimberg area: an area geographically distinguished by the natural boundaries of the Meduna River to the west, the Cosa stream to the east, the first foothills of the Carnic Pre-Alps to the north, and the Gaio-Istrago line to the south. Various grave goods from the imperial-era necropolis of Lestans and Borgo Ampiano can be seen from the Roman period; there are also numerous exhibits from the castles of Toppo, Pinzano and Solimbergo, as well as Renaissance ceramic artifacts.