Perforated Steel Facade – Lokmanya Bank

While this project featured only external applications, perforated metal screens can also be specified as interior design elements to create see-through partitions or sound-absorbing surfaces. From lightweight decorative elements to load-bearing structural components, perforated metal offers unique opportunities to combine strength, functionality and beauty.

Additionally, Diamond Metal Screens’ perforated facades enable interior spaces to benefit from natural light, filtered in such a way that it reduces the glare of direct sunlight and resulting in an environment that is conducive to relaxation and working. Whether used internally or externally, perforations create a dialogue between space, obscuring or inviting views as required and keeping temperature and brightness at a pleasant and practical level. Shade and privacy will continue to be the key practical purposes of perforations, but the potential applications are greater than ever.

Materials

The perforations are possible in the following materials: Stainless Steel, Pre-Galvanised Steel, Copper, Brass, Zinc, Aluminium and CRCA / HR Steel.

Perforations

The shapes that can be perforated are Round, Square, Conical, Rectangular, Herringbone, Triangular, Hexagonal, Embossed and Diamond.

More about this product

Location: Pune, Maharashtra, India
Material used: Galvanized steel 1mm thick
Coating: Powder coating
Area: 300 sq.m
Year: 2012
Architect: Mr.Praveen Bavdekar, Thirspace Architecture Studio

MIT's Stata Center: The Static Soul of a Dynamic Body

Although President Thomas Jefferson’s neo-classical design for the University of Virginia (completed in 1826) is often credited as the hallmark of American campus design, much of what we admire architecturally on the campuses of American universities dates back to only the turn of the 20th century. Between the 1890s and World War I, government initiatives and favorable economic conditions allowed for a flourishing of creative and innovative developments.

Building 10 at MIT designed by William BosworthPrinceton’s 19th century Gothic Revival and Stanford’s California Mission style (with local sandstone and red-tile roofs) were among the many standouts of this era.1 But as architectural historian Mark Jarzombek asserts, the design of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) at that time was especially distinctive. Unlike other, more traditionally self-contained campuses, MIT became an integral part of the city it was located in.

It was “not only resolutely urban, but also an important element in Boston’s emerging neoclassical silhouette.”2 When MIT’s new Cambridge campus,3 or what was then known as “the New Tech,” designed by William Welles Bosworth, was opened in June 13, 1916, Bostonians and Cantabrigians admired its unique synthesis of classical motifs. The prevalence of the Greek Ionic colonnades and a central dome that resembled the grand Pantheon in Rome evoked Jefferson’s ideas, the European Enlightenment, and the ideals of classical architecture.

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Room Dividers – Partition Wall MDF

Bruag offers laser-cut perforated panels made from Medium Density Fibreboard (MDF). The degree of detail in perforations are excellent compared to traditional production techniques such as CNC.

Laser Technology

Bruag laser technology offers creative-minded designers maximum flexibility providing the opportunity to create extremely delicate perforated panels for different applications. The partition wall panel designs are as diverse as their possible applications.

Colors

In addition to the flexibility regarding panel shapes, a wide range of colors can be specified. A choice of over 3000 different colors (RAL, NCS S, Bruag Alu, Les Couleurs® Le Corbusier) is available. The world-renowned Swiss Architect Le Corbusier not only left behind a great architectural heritage but his own color system, too. Les Couleurs® Le Corbusier is a coherent system of 63 architectural colors, where all colors are naturally harmonious and can be combined with each other.

ADDRESS:

124-126 Castle Peak Road,
Cheung Sha Wan
(Spark City Cheung Sha Wan)

25 Tong Mi Road, Mong Kok
(Spark City Mong Kok)

209 Ma Tau Wai Road, To Kwa Wan
(Spark City To Kwa Wan)

Leasing Enquiry:

2895 3803 / 2471 9133
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