Located next to the Via Nova, the archaeological site of Aquis Querquenis is composed of a military camp, a road mansion and hot springs. The Roman camp of a cohort of the 7th Geminian legion was one of the military epicenters from which the construction of this route was activated. To date, about 2,000 m have been excavated and consolidated, totally or partially. of wall, with its successive and alternating towers, as well as two important entrances, the “principalis sinistra” gate and the “decumana” gate, apart from a small sector of the moat; three barrancones for the troops, with their “contuvernia”, for the eighty soldiers of each centuria, the dwelling of the respective commands and the corresponding patio or “impluvium” equipped with a cistern at its midpoint; the hospital, with its multiple dependencies arranged around a central patio, and two “horrea”. In recent times, the core building of the camp, the “pincipa” or headquarters, has been exhumed.

From the road mansion, or what is the same, a small lodging or resting place for travelers who traveled the road, was excavated what looks like a hostel building with its large covered patio, possessing a bakery oven in one of the corners, the sector destined for the rooms, the kitchen and the nearby outdoor patio with the corresponding well for watering the beasts of burden.

A few meters away we find the Baños de Bande, Roman baths that are uncovered when the flow of the Conchas reservoir allows it. It consists of a set of stone pools and individual bathtubs.