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Maximum indulgence
in a minimum of space.

Our innovation SteamFit, awared with an iF Design Award 2019, offers maximum comfort under the shower. The new cabin combines a shower with steam to create a comforting hammam-style experience – through the easy-care, seamless white of the elegant solid surface material as well as the hidden technology and floating bench behind the glass front. Customised and equipped with light, speakers or aroma systems, the steam shower is a multi-sensory experience of indulgence.


SteamFit at a glance

  • Steam bath and shower in one cabin
  • Minimalist design, quality materials
  • Easy-care and pore-free WSP™
  • Installation barrier-free or existing flooring
  • Bench with indirect LED lighting
  • Variable in size and individually equipped
  • Powerful Swiss steam technology
  • Steam generator in pull-out compartment or on-site cupboard
  • Swiss production

Options:
  • Suspended ceiling with LED RGB
  • Overhead shower
  • Seamless niche with LED RGB
  • Fittings individually selectable
  • Speakers with Bluetooth connection

Steam bath or sauna
What’s the difference?

The difference between a sauna and a steam bath/shower is the climate, i.e. the temperature/humidity ratio. A sauna is kept at a temperature of around 85 to 100 degrees Celsius, with five to ten per cent humidity. The dry, hot air makes you start to perspire, as the body tries to cool down. This is quite different to a steam bath. Dense, warm wafts of mist are created with 100% humidity and temperatures of around 40 degrees Celsius. This is because water transfers heat better than air. Which is why you sweat less than in a sauna.

What appears to be sweat is in fact steam condensing into water on your skin, which is around 20 degrees cooler. In both cases, an 8–12-minute session is recommended before moving on to the second and, if need be, third round after cooling down and relaxing.

Like saunas, steam baths or showers have many health benefits, which optimally unfold through aromas, herbs and sound. Steam baths are also known as caldaria, Turkish baths or hammam.