In the middle of the room and eye to eye with the Zirbitzkogel, our bathtub is ready for you.
The champagne is chilled, the animals in the forest know about it and start the performance.
What does the Titanic have to do with our bathtub?
ARROLL – The manufacturer
Based in Belfast: home to a ship building heritage that was known to be the best in the world.
A century ago, highly skilled workers were striding to work, swerving at the clatter of horses’ hooves on the cobbles and jumping at the whistle of steam behind them.
Never more so in 1909, when the White Star Line’s new Titanic liner became the 401st ship to be built at Belfast’s Harland & Wolff shipyard.
To accommodate the sheer size of Titanic and her sister ships, the yard constructed a sophisticated, state of the art scaffolding system known as the Arroll Gantry named after its designer, the Scottish civil engineer and bridge builder, Sir William Arroll.
Our bathtub
A real gem (150kg heavy cast iron with enamel inside, handmade … and that’s how it feels 🙂
Directly in front of the panoramic glass window with a view of the valley and the Zirbitzkogel …
Enjoy the morning sun in your own chalet in the bathtub… is there anything better?
Villandry double slipper cast iron bath is the ultimate expression of bathroom luxury. A glamorous bath that hints at a more hedonistic period, it brings all the drama and splendour of a 19th century French chateau to modern and traditional bathrooms. Plenty of space for two, The Villandry also comes with distinguished lion’s paw feet.
The Villandry double cast iron bath is the ultimate expression of luxury in the bathroom. This glamorous bath, reminiscent of a hedonistic era, brings all the drama and splendor of a 19th century French chateau to modern and traditional bathrooms. The Villandry offers ample space for two people and is also equipped with elegant lion’s paw feet.
A quick note for the “digital nomads” and their successors:
Email is not email
Enamel = glassy, shiny coating on objects made of metal or similar.
You can read about it on Wikipedia:
The first known enamel work is 3500 years old and was found as grave goods in Mycenaean tombs on Cyprus.
In contrast, ChatGPT delivers the following:
The oldest known form of e-mail communication dates back 3500 years and was discovered as grave goods in Mycenaean tombs on Cyprus.
No further comment on this 😉