Along Corso Mazzini are present, on the sides, the noble palaces: Palazzo Gabuzzi Fedeli Luzi, Palazzo Sanzi Pericoli, Palazzo Cherubini and Palazzo Menchetti.
...The structure of Palazzo Gabuzzi Fedeli Luzi appears as typical of the ‘600. Characteristic balconies and ballets railing in wrought iron. Inside there are fine paintings and a chapel, dedicated to Pio V. Today under renovation houses, in the noble floors, frescoes of fine Pompeian style. The Palazzo Sanzi Pericoli was built by the Sanzi brothers, noble landowners, between 1723 and 1739. Splendid example of a noble palace has an airy neoclassical atrium. The numerous rooms are decorated with frescoes and fine stuccos and preserve precious paintings and furnishings. Palazzo Cherubini was built in the mid-sixteenth century. Belonged to the noble family Cherubini in which the most important character was the cardinal Francesco Cherubini lived between 1585 and 1656. The interior is embellished with numerous stuccoes of 1600 fine workmanship. Today it houses the headquarters of the BCC bank. Palazzo Menchetti is composed of two parts: one dating back to the ‘600 and the other, in medieval style, was built in 1930/35 by the owner, Andrea Menchetti, an internationally renowned historian. Inside there is the Hall of the Ancestors, with fine stucco and precious antique furniture.