Hunting Room
The Hunting Room got its name after the painting of the walls, on which there are figures of hunters and animals among plant ornaments. Hunting was a favourite pastime of the nobility in the Middle Ages, which is why hunting scenes can also be found in interior decoration. The drawing of plant tendrils on the walls is complemented by hunting figural scenes.

Two Indian buffalo horns, hanging on the wall, are modified as hunting trophies. Around the table there are chairs from the second half of the 19th century, which replicate the Renaissance shape of a sgabello, that is, a chair that has decorated boards instead of the classic legs. The washbasin in the corner of the room is one of several in the castle that were fed by water from the water tank in the tower. Behind the closed door there is the end of the elevator shaft, where count Pálffy planned to have a hand-powered elevator that could transport various meals from the castle kitchen on the ground floor.
