Church of Saint Maria Maddalena
The church of Saint Maria Maddalena, once parish church of the area, is probably previous of year one thousand,
as it is spoken in some documents of 1037, was originally in the Romanesque style with a single aisle and was built within the walls of protection of the village of Volta. In the course of 1600 is radically changed with the addition of two aisles and chapels and altars; in 1800 there was also a draft Vergani to lengthen it and renovate it further, but remained unfinished, while the facade was completed only in the sixties.
The church of Santa Maria Maddalena houses inside the remains of Beata Paola Montaldi and one can admire both several frescoes of the fifteenth and sixteenth century, recently found to be the main altar in marble worked with some frontals, both various oil paintings of the seventeenth century and eighteenth centuries including a large altarpiece by Pietro Rotari.