The palace presents itself as a regular and austere structure when compared to the Baroque style of the time. The only clue to this style are the curved balconies of the first floor windows, decorated only with bare rectilinear frames, and the
lion heads decorating the otherwise equally bare portal. The interior is different: Marquis Acerbi was the protagonist of a challenge with the Annoni family, owners of the
palazzo di fronte, for who owned the most sumptuous palace. A cannonball dating from the five days is still visible in the palace, embedded in the façade, to the right of the first right-hand balcony on the first floor, under which there is a small plaque. == References ==