An ethnographic museum collection, with about 2,000 pieces on hill fort activities and everyday utensils housed in an old cattle-breeding farmstead dating from the 17th century. The dwelling consists of a kitchen with open hearth, bedroom and a living room, with all their fixtures and fittings.
It also has a Franciscan chapel built in the 17th century. The chapel is presided over by Our Lady of La Portalea (Our Lady of the Manger in Bethlehem) and boasts a polychrome altarpiece, with St Francis of Assisi at the top and, at the bottom from the left to right, St Anthony, Our Lady of the Manger and St Benedict. It is believed there was a Franciscan convent with 5 or 6 friars on this site, with its wine cellar (under restoration) and oven for baking bread.