In place of Santa Lucia
The parish church of San Lorenzo martire was built between the 18th and 19th centuries (1829 the consecration), demolishing the older church of Santa Lucia.
The decentralized position compared to the village is due to the fact that it originally served as a place of worship for the eastern hamlet (while the village Pino, west of the Gleria stream, was served by the chapel of San Girolamo, within the grounds of Palazzo Toppo Wassermann).
The hall, with a single nave, culminates in the main stone altar in the shape of a sarcophagus of the Friulian school. Along the two main sides, there are four other altars, dedicated to Saint Anthony, the Madonna del Carmine, the Sacred Heart, and Saint Lucia. The building is also decorated with various 18th-century paintings attributed to Giovanni Giuseppe Buzzi; while on the ceiling, one can admire a fresco by the Friulian artist Carlo Boldi.
Among other works of art, a wooden sculpture of the Madonna del Carmine is of particular interest, with the gilded wooden throne used to carry it in procession, a work by Valentino Panciera.
The church also houses an organ made in 1892 by Beniamino Zanin from Codroipo, a member of the longest-active family of organ builders in Italy.