Osilo between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries is transformed by partly overcoming the medieval-age arrangement.
A process that is articulated in the space defined as Via degli Orti and that leads to the creation of multi-story houses overcoming the original model with dwellings organized with only the ground floor and a single interior room.
The dwellings have a standard model with a single facade, decorations in the elevation, an entrance with an arched ferrule, cornices along the stringcourses, and small terraces on the upper floor.
Inside are the service spaces (stables and cellars), on the right the wide staircase to reach the upper floors intended to house the bedrooms.
It is in this process that the Palazzotto Satta should be included, which shows in the lower part the rooms intended for the shelter of horses, the cellar for storing wood and access to the cistern for collecting rainwater.
Today the structure is used for temporary ethnographic exhibitions.