Historical sites

Oratorio San\'Antonio di Padova

Saint Anthony of Padua

Is an octagonal building which during the 18° century added a portico, which confers to the chapel its present appearance. Inside the building, a fresco of Carloni, illustrates life-size scenes of Christ’s life.

Sant\'Antonio Abate

Saint Anthony the Great

The Church of Saint Anthony the Great was built around 1300 next to the convent by the Antonian Order in Vienna, a well-known religious congregation which cured lepers from the Olona region.

Saint Maria’s bell tower

The “campanile”, designed in 1532 by the artists morcotesi Rossi and Paleari in Romanesque style, it was completed only in 1729 with the addition of an octagonal superstructure and the cupula, and so you can admire still today.

Santa Maria del Sasso

The Church of Saint Maria del Sasso

The Renaissance-Baroque style church, was built in several stages. Initially, between 1470 and 1478 a building was erected with three naves in the Romanesque style, with six characteristic pillars in terra cotta. In 1581 the lateral chapel was erected, dedicated to San Carlo.

Cimitero monumentale

The Monumental Cemetery

After having built the Church of Santa Maria, your average citizen would have been buried where the current churchyard and the Oratory of Saint Anthony of Padua lie, while noblemen and the clergy were granted the privilege of being entombed within the church.

The monumental steps

The grandest staircase of the prealpine region boasts 404 steps and features one of the most far-reaching views in the area. Rome wasn’t built in a day, and the same can be said about this masterpiece: the most important part was commissioned by Davide Fossati and took five years (1727-1732) and stretches between the only mule track to the current sacristy.