Most surviving military installations in Molise have been transformed and adapted to changing defensive
requirements, and often made suitable for residential functions. The most common functional elements are the central courtyard and sometimes the square that
fronts the main entrance, rainwater cisterns (more seldom wells), warehouses for equipment and stores (especially corn but also oil and wine), ovens and
chimneys (for heating but especially for the kitchens), latrines, closets and built-in wardrobes, basement or underground rooms, residential rooms and,
occasionally, the chapel. Underground or overhead walkways (the walkway that joins the palace to the chapel of S.Gennaro at Lucito is one example) were
frequently built to connect separate buildings. The convention of situating the rooms reserved for the lord’s residence on the first floor, while the upper
floors provided lodgings for the servants seems to have been followed. In the least altered buildings the functional elements typical of fortification
architecture are still recognisable, though some of the original arrow slits have often been widened and transformed into windows. In some cases the old
military structures, though “covered” with new plaster, flooring and false ceilings, still preserve unaltered all the characteristics of the original
architecture. Investigation of ground-floor and underground rooms often disclose very interesting remains of old walls and evidence of stratigraphies of the
upper levels that are of great documentary significance.