Knowledge about cultural and archaeological heritage can dissolve or even disappear with the passage of time, especially when the protection level of the archaeological site is weak.The recent development of techniques based on remote sensing from remotely controlled light platforms, so-called Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) or drones, carrying sensors in visible and other spectral ranges, allows to measure efficiently the current surface morphology of a damaged archaeological site.In this work, a deteriorated and unique archaeological site due its chronological and functional singularity was chosen as the study case. Mound structures made of stone, interconnected one to each other in a regular network, covered by vaults, and well adapted to a smooth slope topography have no known precedents in the Iberian Peninsula in the Bronze Age. Nowadays, this site is seriously damaged, and its protection level by the administrations is weak. Nevertheless, two archaeological campaigns were carried out recording interesting information.A UAV-Photogrammetry project based on Structure from Motion (SfM) and Multi-View Stereopsis (MVS) algorithms was applied to model the surface terrain where the structural basis and connection channels were built, obtaining a dense point cloud, an orthoimage and a Digital Surface Model (DSM). The topographic data covering altered areas were removed from the dense point cloud, and then a new interpolated surface was obtained representing the unaltered morphology.Finally, the information recorded in the archaeological campaigns was materialised in a virtual reconstruction located between both surfaces, measured by UAV-Photogrammetry and interpolated, and then the original architectural complex in its context was recreated and shared with the scientific community through Google Earth, contributing to recovering and preserving this cultural heritage, even after its disappearance.