| In the past, the water provision was supplied by means of the aqueduct Lea, built in 1669 with clay pipes; by this way, thr water arrived as far as Lea Square behind the “Valdina” Palace, so named in honour of the District of Lea. The Prince Giovanni Valdina ordered a fountain in Billiemi marble at Gaspare Serpotta 's shop, craftsman identified as the Giacomo Serpotta 's father, that worked in Palermo , in change of “a white woollen suit, decorated with gold, a pair of trousers and a justicoat ”
The fountain was sent by sea to Fondachello and then to Rocca in 1673. As in the Lea square there is a monumental fountain in Billiemi marble, it is easy to presume, thanks to the erosion of time too, that it may be the fountain ordered to Serpotta by Valdina. In 1895, the Major Nicolò Nastasi Foca made the old aqueduct (probably in disuse) open up. It was also restored the ancient monumental Fountain made up of a bath with twelve round-corner sides.
He made a central block put up, in the centre of the fountain, with two little lateral fountains for the water flow.
In a second time, on the same water duct that transported water to the monumental fountain a public Lavatory, used by the women of Rocca until the beginning of the Fifties, was built by the Major Nicolò Nastasi Foca.
The draining waters of the lavatory were used for the irrigation, paying an annual tax to the municipality.
The lavatory is situated along Via Lavatoio and it is made up of eight similar baths. The covering is made up of tiles that are on eight walling columns.
An important cultural work is the old millstone, situated at Via Roma, bought by the Municipality in December 2002. It will become a Museum. The original structure belonged to the Vermiglias, a family not native of Roccavaldina, but acquired to the town because Doctor Antonio Vermiglia married a Bottaro native of Roccavaldina and Major Nicolò Nastasi Foca's sister in-law.
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