LOGOS CAVE CAPPADOCIA HOTEL
This Cappadocia Room was once Ahmet Hakkı Pasha’s private bedroom. Located on the upper floor of the mansion and framed by quiet stone walls, it offered a refuge from public life. The day ended here—in stillness. The room was furnished only with what was needed: a bed built along the wall, a water jug placed at the bedside, and a single woven rug spread across the floor.
When the Pasha returned from long days of official duty, he would enter this room first. It was understood: this was a place for solitude. Visitors rarely knocked, and if they did, they knocked softly. The room was his boundary, a space that protected his quiet hours from the demands of the outside world.
Today, this Cappadocia Room offers guests that same sanctuary. Nothing distracts from its restful simplicity. The silence is not emptiness—it is intention. As you step inside, you’re invited to share in the serenity that once belonged to a figure of legacy and discipline. The room remains deeply personal, a corner of calm in a house full of memory.