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Villorba

Villorba is a municipality in Treviso's northern belt, formed in 1807 from the union of three once-independent communities — Villo...

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Villorba is a municipality in Treviso's northern belt, formed in 1807 from the union of three once-independent communities — Villorba, Lancenigo and Fontane — and today grown into one of the province's most populous and productive centres. It should be described honestly: this is not a postcard destination, but a largely residential and industrial territory, shaped by its proximity to major economic hubs such as Ponzano Veneto, home to the Benetton Group. Yet within this apparent ordinariness lies a surprise: the municipality counts no fewer than eighteen recognised Venetian villas, evidence of a past in which noble Venetian and Trevisan families chose this fertile land, watered by numerous spring-fed streams, to build their country residences. Visitors to Villorba therefore find an authentic Veneto plain landscape, where industrial sheds and historic villas coexist, and where small churches and private chapels still tell the long story of this territory.

Updated 11 July 2026 · Sources: https://www.comune.villorba.tv.it/homepage/territuris/cosa_vedere/ville.aspx · https://www.comune.villorba.tv.it/homepage/territuris/storia.aspx

Villorba 27°
Sat 30° 24°
Sun 33° 22°
Mon 32° 23°
Tue 33° 25°

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The story

The story of Villorba

Three Municipalities Became One

The present-day municipality of Villorba was formed in 1807 through the administrative merger of three historically distinct communities: Villorba, Lancenigo and Fontane. Each had its own identity and history, tied to proximity to the Roman municipium of Treviso and to later agricultural settlement in the medieval and early modern periods. This composite origin explains why the municipality today appears as a mosaic of small centres, each with its own parish church and historic core, rather than as a single compact town.

Eighteen Venetian Villas Across the Municipality

Few visitors expect to find, in a municipality known chiefly for its industrial character, as many as eighteen residences officially recognised as Venetian villas. Between the 17th and 18th centuries, the areas around Lancenigo and the surrounding countryside filled with country houses built by wealthy Venetian and Trevisan citizens, drawn by the abundance of water and the fertility of the soil. Among the finest buildings is the chapel dedicated to the Assumption of Mary, originally the private chapel of Palazzo Grimani, a noble Venetian family — a small but telling clue to the density of aristocratic presence that once characterised this corner of the Marca Trevigiana.

A Roman Legacy Beneath the Plain

Proximity to the Roman municipium of Treviso meant this territory was already densely settled in antiquity: as late as the medieval period there was still memory of a Roman villa at Casal Vecchio, evidence of continuous settlement along the water and land routes linking the Roman town to its surrounding countryside. While there are no major archaeological sites open to the public today, this historical stratification explains the territory's long continuity of settlement, from early Roman farms to Renaissance villas and on to contemporary urban expansion.

A Productive Territory, Between Industry and Services

It should be said clearly: Villorba's main vocation today is economic rather than touristic. The municipality is part of a production district of national significance, in an area that also includes neighbouring Ponzano Veneto, historic seat of the Benetton Group, and hosts numerous manufacturing, logistics and service businesses along the main routes to Treviso. This reality coexists, not without some visual contrast, with the remaining farmland and the historic heritage of the villas, in a balance typical of many towns in the Veneto's urban belt.

Churches, Chapels and Scattered Small Treasures

Beyond the villas, the municipality preserves a significant number of parish churches, wayside shrines and small private chapels, spread across Villorba, Lancenigo and Fontane. These are evidence of a religiosity deeply rooted in rural life, often linked precisely to the noble families who owned the surrounding villas. Even without a single great postcard monument, this dense fabric of minor religious buildings conveys the image of a community that, over the centuries, built its identity around small centres of worship and social life.

Not-to-be-missed Experiences

  • Scoprire alcune delle diciotto ville venete disseminate nel territorio
  • Discover some of the eighteen Venetian villas scattered across the territory

To see

What to see in Villorba

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