The bath house comprised four rooms, three of which were heated by a hypocaust (floor heating) system and its praefurnium (stoke hole). The floors, made from concrete with pottery inclusions, supported by small sandstone and ceramic posts are very well preserved, as are the caniculi (ceramic flues) for the evacuation of hot smoke.
The first room, square in plan, corresponds to a changing and relaxing room. Elements of a suspended ceiling were found on ceramic plaques that had fallen to the floor. This ceiling was covered with plaster decorated with a painted white background and a geometric "network" motif in red, yellow and green. Meticulous excavation of the plaster fragments made it possible for archaeologists to reconstruct the decoration.
The changing room opens onto another room corresponding to a cold bath with an opus sectile (pavement) floor of fine black, white, gray and red stones. The bases of the walls were covered with white limestone slabs and mouldings, while the upper parts seem to have been decorated with plaster panels painted yellow and green. This room extends into a rectangular basin visible as a protuberance outside the building. This basin (2.25 m long, 1.75 m wide and 1.5 m deep) was used for cold or lukewarm baths. It was entered by a corner stairway.
In the contiguous warm room, there was no bath and the floor was in opus sectile. The bases of the walls were decorated with limestone slabs placed against the caniculi.
The last room was the sauna, equipped with a hot basin and an individual bath, 2.10 m long and 1 m wide. Its rounded contour in concrete with pottery inclusions, masks an initial mosaic covering. The floor of the room was a polished concrete with pottery inclusions, which covered the suspensura of the hypocaust. The wall over the bath was decorated with a mosaic, showing a high level of luxury.
The first room, square in plan, corresponds to a changing and relaxing room. Elements of a suspended ceiling were found on ceramic plaques that had fallen to the floor. This ceiling was covered with plaster decorated with a painted white background and a geometric "network" motif in red, yellow and green. Meticulous excavation of the plaster fragments made it possible for archaeologists to reconstruct the decoration.
The changing room opens onto another room corresponding to a cold bath with an opus sectile (pavement) floor of fine black, white, gray and red stones. The bases of the walls were covered with white limestone slabs and mouldings, while the upper parts seem to have been decorated with plaster panels painted yellow and green. This room extends into a rectangular basin visible as a protuberance outside the building. This basin (2.25 m long, 1.75 m wide and 1.5 m deep) was used for cold or lukewarm baths. It was entered by a corner stairway.
In the contiguous warm room, there was no bath and the floor was in opus sectile. The bases of the walls were decorated with limestone slabs placed against the caniculi.
The last room was the sauna, equipped with a hot basin and an individual bath, 2.10 m long and 1 m wide. Its rounded contour in concrete with pottery inclusions, masks an initial mosaic covering. The floor of the room was a polished concrete with pottery inclusions, which covered the suspensura of the hypocaust. The wall over the bath was decorated with a mosaic, showing a high level of luxury.

