Winepress 1 (L107; Figs. 3, 4) was a simple installation with a rectangular treading floor (L108; 3.0 × 3.6 m) whose walls (height 0.05–0.10 m) were partly preserved. A hewn pit for collecting the grape pulp (L115) was set in the eastern part of the treading floor, and a conical cupmark (L114) was—in the center of the western wall. A rectangular collecting vat (L109; 0.45 × 0.95 m, depth 0.6 m), whose northern wall and floor did not survive, was found to the north of the treading floor. The must flowed to the collecting vat through a hewn opening in the northern wall of the treading floor. A large natural pit (L110) was unearthed in the western part of the winepress.
 
Winepress 2 (L100; 15 × 25 m; Figs. 5–7) was a complex installation that included several treading floors, work surfaces, collecting vats, a pit for securing a press screw and cupmarks. In the northwestern part of the winepress was a rectangular treading floor (L101) whose walls (height 0.05–0.10 m) were partially preserved. An elliptical pit for securing a screw (L116; depth 0.8 m) and a pit in which the grape pulp was collected (L122) were hewn in it. A trough-shaped cupmark (L123) was hewn in the northwestern wall. South of the treading floor was a rectangular collecting vat (L102; depth 0.6 m) that shared its southeastern wall with another treading floor (L103); that floor was rectangular, and its walls (height 0.05–0.20 m) were partially preserved. In the center of that floor was a hewn pit used for collecting the grape pulp (L119). A shallow rock-hewn channel extended from the pit, and conveyed the must to a rectangular collecting vat (L104; depth 0.4 m). A settling pit (L118) was hewn in the centre of the collecting vat. The hewn remains of a work surface (L117) were revealed north of the collecting vat. North of the surface was another work surface (L105), of which only the southwestern part survived (L124). A leveled bedrock surface (L126) with a cupmark (L127) in its center was unearthed c. 4 m southeast of the collecting vat. A square collecting vat (L128; 1.3 × 1.3 m, depth 1 m) was exposed c. 3 m southeast of the leveled bedrock surface. A settling pit (L131) was hewn in the vat’s floor, and two steps (L132) were hewn in the vat’s northwestern corner. Southwest of the collecting vat was a shallow elliptical pit (L106) that may have been used for extracting the must. Two cupmarks (L120, L121) were hewn east of the collecting vat.
 
Winepress 3 (L111; Figs. 8, 9) was a simple installation with a rectangular treading floor (L112; 2.3 × 2.7 m), whose walls (height 5 cm) were partly preserved. A hewn channel led from the treading floor to a rectangular collecting vat (L113; 1.2 × 1.6 m, depth 0.9 m); its northeastern wall was not preserved.
 
Several abraded pottery sheds from the Late Roman period or the Early Byzantine period (fourth–fifth centuries CE) were found. These include part of a cooking pot rim that was found in the collecting vat of Winepress 2 (L104; Fig. 10).
The excavation revealed that this agricultural and industrial area specialed in wine production during the Late Roman and Early Byzantine periods