Designed in 1780 by the architect Ferrara Luigi Bertelli for the benefit of Marquis Camillo Bevilacqua, this important garden was reminded of the many sculptures that adorn it and for the wonderful variety of citrus fruits and flower plants that reflected its magnificent paths. Near the mid-19th century, Masari took over the palace by modifying the entire complex as an English park. The design of the flower ponds is the design of the nineteenth century and many more secular trees: in addition to the cedar of Lebanon at the entrance, there are some badgers, gorgeous ginkgo tree and giant oak tree at the entrance of Corso Ercoli I. Since 1936 it is owned by the Municipality of Ferrara, which turned it into a public park.