After abandoning a plan by G. Fossati – whose model is displayed in the Scuola Grande – the task of rebuilding the church was given to Giovanni Scalfarotto in 1726, who kept the old apses and the dome but restored the building completely.
The interior has one aisle with a level ceiling; four sixteenth-century altars placed at the sides of the aisle give the whole church a sense of dignity.
The façade was completely rebuilt by Bernardino Maccaruzzi between 1765 and 1771. He wanted to introduce an architectonic colonnade similar to that of the nearby Scuola Grande, composed of two orders of superimposed Corinthian columns in the façade. The four columns of the first order are surrounded by a vegetable garland of oak, vine, cedar and olive trees (respectively) at about two thirds of their height. The front of the building is concluded at the top by curvilinear tympanums.
At the side of the church towards the Scuola, the old portal and the rose window which belonged to the building erected by Bon in 1489 can be seen.
Until 1910, the Church had been connected to the Scuola by a wall, which enclosed the space of campo San Rocco and which – inside a much simpler architectonic structure to that initially planned by the same Maccaruzzi – displayed the statue of the Saint by Giovanni Buora from the sixteenth-century church. When the wall was demolished, because of road conditions, the statue was placed in the “portico delle arche,” the second entrance to the Scuola Grande.