Room · FS-401 / FS-402
The Faraday Suite
A suite that takes the edge off the air.
The Faraday Suite sits at the southeast corner of the fourth floor, where the original Otto Vogel windows are tallest. We added one thing: a fine copper mesh fitted to the inside of the casements, hand-woven by Drahtwerk Halle to a pattern derived from a real Faraday cage. Phones still get signal — barely, and only when held against the glass. Most guests stop trying within an hour.
The bath is open to the bedroom, separated by a single oxblood linen curtain. The freestanding tub is a restored 1930s cast-iron piece sourced from a hotel in Lyon. It is, we are told, the best place in Berlin to read a long book about something difficult.
Materials
- Bauwerk lime plaster walls (Bone Nº 02)
- Smoked Brandenburg oak flooring by Tischlerei Mehring
- Brass switches and sockets by Forbes & Lomax, plated locally
- Brushed-brass shower fittings by Vola
- Bedside lights: bespoke Anastassiades for the property
- Bedding: Hästens 2000T mattress, Society Limonta heavy linen in oat
Technology
- Wired 1 Gbps uplink at the desk (RJ45, no captive portal)
- 2.4/5 GHz wifi available on request; off by default in this room
- Genelec 4030C speakers, Bluetooth 5.3
- Lutron lighting, four presets, manual override at every switch
- Television: 55" OLED concealed behind oak panel (HDMI labelled, USB power on the desk)
What's in the minibar
Companion Coffee whole-bean (ground to order at reception), Bonanza espresso pods for the Marzocco Linea Micra, Berliner Brandstifter gin, Augustiner Helles, a Riesling from Weingut Christmann, dark chocolate by Belyzium (Berlin/Belize), and one apple from the Brandenburg orchard our pastry chef visits monthly. The apple is complimentary. The rest is honour-bar; the tab settles at checkout.
A note about the name
A real Faraday cage would attenuate signal by 80+ dB. Ours, being decorative, is more like 18–22. You can still doomscroll if you must. The point is that it is harder, and that you may choose not to.