Church of Saint Joseph
It is an 18th-century building with a simple yet elegant stone-clad façade, which was left unfinished, as can be seen from the truncated pilasters. On the right side of the church stands the contemporary bell gable, with four openings.
The church was commissioned by the devotees of the Patriarch Saint Joseph, who in October 1711 were granted permission by Grand Duke Cosimo III to build the structure.
Inside, the church has a single nave with cross vaults and two side altars. In the entrance hall there are two plaques commemorating Bishop Marcacci and the visit of Grand Duke Pietro Leopoldo in 1777. In the choir loft stands the 18th-century organ. There is also a Rococo aedicule altar in masonry and painted stucco, with two columns topped by statues of allegorical figures; at the center is a painting from the workshop of Francesco Conti, dating to the first half of the 18th century.