Stainless Steel
1.4301
The story of stainless steel begins in 1912, when Krupp filed the first patents for rust-resistant chromium steel. More than a century later, the alloy designation is largely unchanged. We use 1.4301 as per DIN 17 440: approximately 18% chromium and 8% nickel, the composition that has proven itself in architecture and precision industry under extreme conditions.
Of more than 100 rust- and acid-resistant alloys classified as stainless steel, 1.4301 is the most widely specified for architectural applications. Its surface resists corrosion, stands up to heavy use without showing dents or scratches and requires minimal maintenance. A self-regenerating passive layer forms continuously at the surface. The material recovers by itself.
On the H64, 1.4301 is uncoated and either tumbled matte or polished to mirror grade No. 8. The surface you receive is the metal itself. No lacquer, no treatment. A decade from now it will look as it does today.