
A spacious room for heroes. With period furniture to banish the gryphon. This former café is a spacious room for heroes. With period furniture to banish the gryphon.
Room size
65 m²
Number of persons
2-4
LOCATION
- Piazza Walther
AMENITIES
- Large twin beds (200x210) made of local maple
- Soft down pillows and duvets
- Convenient bedside lighting controls
- Individual room temperature control
- Wengé wood floor, blue Gabbeh carpet
- Antique couch corner, leather armchair and writing desk
- Kettle with TWG tea selection and instant coffee
- Umbrella and Greif bag
- Light Calacatta marble bathroom with whirlpool and shower
- Certified organic cosmetics with delicate Alpine herbal fragrance
ALWAYS
- Free Wi-Fi, safe, interactive 42“ sat-TV with radio, telephone, minibar, hairdryer, make-up mirror, bathrobe, slippers
ON REQUEST
- Extra beds for children or adults
- Various pillows
- Iron and ironing board
- Laundry and shoe cleaning service
Hiroko Nakajima-Beckers

Hiroko Nakajima-Beckers with her installation ‘The Gryphon’ (1)

Hiroko Nakajima-Beckers with her installation ‘The Gryphon’ (2)

Hiroko Nakajima-Beckers with her installation ‘The Gryphon’ (3)
Next to the bed in Room 109, German-based artist Hiroko Nakajima-Beckers has adorned two wall cupboards with pictures that, when taken together, depict the Japanese term for gryphon – the ‘mysterious beast’. The left-hand cupboard represents the gryphon’s lower body, the right-hand cupboard its torso. The artist has hand-painted flames on the wall, and the brocade fabric on the bed’s headboard also depicts a gryphon. The work is complemented by Maria Brunner’s Fetish Shoe drawings.