'This is not just a showroom': going BettePlaces
Upon a recent visit to Bette's HQ, the German bathroom expert revealed a whole world of architectural typologies in a new, immersive proof-of-concept experience.
June 12, 2022 | 10:00 pm CUT

The reception area of newly opened BettePlaces at the company's Delbrück HQ – an immersive proof-of-concept space for communication, experience and inspiration

The 16 microhouses displayed show off highlights from different Bette collections, such as the Pond Silhouette (top) and Lux Oval Highline bathtub (bottom)


Customers and potential business partners can get a unique impression of Bette on site with the help of the architectural installations (top) as well as product and material libraries (middle, bottom)
Putting the show in showroom
‘BettePlaces is not just a showroom,’ Rensinghoff was keen to emphasise when I got there. ‘We wanted to give our customers a new perception of our brand. So, it’s a place for communication, experience, and inspiration.’ Designed by Lake Constance-based office atelier 522 and organised across 1,800 square metres of prime floorspace at Bette HQ, the project is fundamentally about proof-of-concept, demonstrating to architects, planners and dealers, via 16 stand-alone ‘micro houses’, how the brand is as much a trusted project partner as it is a supplier of high-end products.‘We wanted to give our customers a new perception of our brand. BettePlaces is a space for communication, experience, and inspiration’

Visitors to BettePlaces travel far and wide through the experience of bathroom typologies from all regions of the globe – and beyond. Japan (top, middle) and outer space (bottom) are just a few of the expertly curated examples
A place of sustainability
‘Made from a wide variety of materials, such as concrete, clay plaster or Yakisugi-charred spruce wood, each bathroom possesses a very specific aesthetic and constructional situation, with Bette products as the highlight,’ explains atelier 522 CEO Philipp Beck. ‘Product design and architecture merge, showing in the finest detail how good design can draw everything together: from the spaces in which we live, and their individual architecture, to the centre of the home – the bathroom.’
Made from a wide variety of materials, such as concrete, clay plaster, or Yakisugi-charred spruce wood, each bathroom exemplifies a merging of product design and architecture to show the unifying effect of attention to detail
Here you have trend-eschewing archetypical interiors featuring long-life, fully recyclable bathroom products that are fabricated from natural materials



Sparks fly at Bette's manufacturing halls, where heavy metal and robotic automation meet old-fashioned handcraft expertise
Beam me up, Bette
That said, should this not be on your itinerary any time soon, fear not. ‘We’re going to digitise each of the micro houses, so that clients and partners who can’t visit us in person can nonetheless immerse themselves in BettePlaces,’ explains Rensinghoff. ‘It’s a different way of talking to our audience, where we can go deep into detailed planning for a range of structural requirements and, in doing so, offer valuable advice.’
Though BettePlaces can be visited virtually through a 3D tour offered by the company, analogue visitors can experience the extra benefit of visualising the different bathrooms in otherworldly landscapes through a series of smartphone-based AR filters
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