The guesthouse was the rustic annex of the nearby villa of the same name and is therefore linked to its history, until the municipality of Arquà buys this adjacency, while the manor house is bought by the current family that lives there, the Attardi.
The ground floor is undecorated and therefore probably had a rustic function. The Municipal Library, an information desk on the area and a meeting room for the municipality's associations are located here.
The second floor contains rooms that are truly noteworthy from an artistic point of view. They must have housed the distinguished guests of the adjoining villa, as there are precious wooden suspended ceilings, decorated with elaborate tromp l'oeil architectural perspectives and heraldic coats of arms. They may have been partially or entirely made by Callegari, who was also a painter.
Coating the ceilings is a planking. In the larger projecting one, along the perimeter figures the illusion of an awkward balustrade running all around in a very scroungy centripetal perspective. The recessed center of the mighty wooden planking, on the other hand, flaunts two lush decorations derived from the motif of the central rose window.