Considered one of the most representative watchtowers among the 14th-century medieval towers.
It has a square floor plan with six-meter sides and thick masonry walls, and on its upper terrace, it still preserves the machicolation (a parapet surrounding the entire terrace), supported by triangular corbels.
Its height is 10 meters, and it has two floors, while most towers of this type usually have three.
It is currently part of a privately owned residence and has been integrated into the group of houses of later construction.