Located next to the Via Nova, the archaeological complex of Aquis Querquennis consists of a military camp, a road mansion, and thermal waters. The Roman camp of a cohort of the seventh legion gemina was one of the military epicenters from which the construction of this route was activated. To date, about 2,000 meters of wall have been excavated and consolidated, either totally or partially, with its successive and alternating towers, as well as two important entrances, the ‘principalis sinistra’ gate and the ‘decumana’ gate, apart from a small section of the moat; three troop barracks, with their ‘contubernia’, for the eighty soldiers of each century, the residence of the respective commanders and the corresponding courtyard or ‘impluvium’ equipped with a cistern in its middle point; the hospital, with its multiple dependencies arranged around a central courtyard, and two ‘horrea’. Recently, the core building of the camp was unearthed, which is the ‘principia’ or headquarters. From the road mansion, or in other words, a small lodging or rest stop for travelers who traveled the road, what appears to be a hospitality building with its large covered courtyard was excavated, possessing a bread oven in one of the corners, the sector destined for the rooms, the kitchen, and the nearby exterior courtyard provided with the corresponding well to water the pack animals. A few meters away, we find the Bande Baths, which are Roman baths that are exposed when the water level of the Conchas reservoir allows it. It consists of a set of stone pools and individual bathtubs.