The Church of S. Liberatore in Villa Camera, a hamlet of Campli, was built in the 1930s. The external perimeter is entirely covered with travertine, interrupted only by corner pilasters on the plinth placed on the façade.
Above the portal tympanum with an arch culminating in a lobed cross. In the upper part there is an oculus and two side niches with statues; in the back stands the bell tower embellished with a pyramidal spire.
Inside, with a single nave, there is a false flat ceiling that prospectively reproduces a coffered vault. The walls are decorated with three-dimensional stuccoes and faux marble; in the background is the raised presbytery. A terracotta statue of S. Liberatore from 1572 is kept.
The parish of the nearby hamlet of Cesenà also includes that of Villa Camera, perhaps a small and ancient fief of Lombard law. The church was under the patronage of the Mancini family with relative benefit.