The ‘super first class’ suite with a double bed, private bathroom
This bold concept lets any airline roll out superjumbo luxury.
Etihad’s three-room Residence suite on its Airbus A380 remains a game-changer for first class travel, redefining notions of sky-high luxury on board a commercial jetliner.
More than just one private space, the Residence provided high flyers with a separate living room, bedroom and bathroom (with its own shower, naturally).
And while the A380 is no longer being built, it’s now possible for any airline to offer an extravagent better-than-first class experience – no superjumbo required.
This is the En Suite: a ‘super first’ concept from London’s Factorydesign, which also lent its expertise to shaping Etihad’s A380 first class cabin.
In its default configuration, En Suite provides an oversized suite for two passengers travelling together.
A pair of wide armchair-style seats converts into a double bed, with full height walls transforming this into a truly personal space for living, relaxing, dining and sleeping.
The En Suite’s luxury travel trump card, however, is the inclusion of a spacious private bathroom.
“Currently, with the exception of Etihad’s The Residence, even the most privileged premium class travellers are required to share a toilet,” Factorydesign points out.
“Can you imagine that being acceptable in any Four Seasons or Shangri-La Hotel?”
However, for airlines which are a little less adventurous or who needs to sweat their Excel spreadsheet a little harder, Factorydesign can also split En Suite into a pair of self-contained first class suites.
Each has its own aisle entry and shared use of the bathroom – “creating a stunning experience for the passenger while, pragmatically, satisfying the airline’s commercial ambitions,” the firm says.
No airlines have yet signed up for the En Suite, but as business class continues to advance and crowd into the once-exclusive domain of first class, it’s not hard to imagine that this mini-Residence taking pride of place as the halo product on an Airbus A350 or Boeing 777X.
18 Sep 2015
Total posts 136
Seems like wasted space between the bench in front of the seats and the bathroom.
And if you are on the left hand side of the bed you can't get to the bathroom without going out one door into the aisle than back in through the other door (like some restaurants!)
17 Oct 2017
Total posts 22
Seems like the design is predicated on a couple travelling together. When configured for two solo travellers, the seat nearest the aisle is going to be a bit claustrophobic and seemingly not going to have visibility of the windows even. The line about not sharing a toilet also doesn't apply if you're a solo traveller, as you'll be sharing with the occupant of the adjacent seat. (Though in any case, first class bathrooms are always kept spotless by the cabin crew, in my experience.)
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