The church of Sant'Andrea, without a real façade, overlooks a vaulted passage crossed by a road.
On the outside it presents numerous reused elements, including two inscription fragments and a column in Egyptian red granite with a picture of the Corinthian capital, many of which probably come from the bell tower, which collapsed in the 1857 earthquake.
The Renaissance is discernible thanks to two polyptychs: the first, executed at the end of the fifteenth century, depicting the Madonna and Saints and the second, a triptych from 1508 attributed to the Master and commissioned by Giovanni Caputo, from Teggiano, a figure close to the Sanseverino family.