North of the town, in P. Micca Square, there are three important monuments: the Church, the Lourdes Grotto, and the War Memorial. The church, built in the early 1930s, was named from ’38 after the patron saint of miners. Built according to Fascist rationalist architecture, it has an entrance portal to the east, a portico supported by squared pillars and round arches. The facade is embellished with a rose window with two-tone glass that allows the sun’s rays to illuminate the altar as it rises. The reproduction of the Lourdes Grotto, commissioned by Don Nazzareno, was inaugurated in 1953 and is located to the right of the church. The work depicts a rock arch with an altar inside, a niche with a statue of Our Lady. Opposite, the Monument renamed The Cannon was inaugurated around 1950 to honor the memory of the fallen of the two World Wars.