INSPIRATION
Project photos from professionals within the commercial construction and design industry.
Office reception area featuring the projecting two-piece system with the CHFS and IBRR. The BSL-58 was used for the base, and custom use of the PACT-8 trim was used for the light fixture.
This auditorium and meeting room is perfect for hosting panels and meetings at SRF Consulting offices.
There are recessed lights, ample office chairs and tables. The high ceilings and natural light create a spacious atmosphere.
Exterior Stone is a wonderful addition to any building.
Dutch Quality Stone is an exceptionally efficient option that gives you the profile of intricately stacked natural stone in an easy-to-install panel form. No grouting small ledge stones or prolonged construction timelines required.
Livers Bronze Handrails- Custom Belmont Railing System
Waterline Square offers the most comprehensive and cohesive residential experience available in New York City deigned by an unparalleled team of celebrated visionaries.
The finished office has 14,000+ square feet of engineered American Gothic Hickory reclaimed wood flooring and wall paneling, which was pre-finished with a water-based polyurethane.
The University of Minnesota-Duluth offering students, faculty, staff, and alums a place for training, fitness and intramural sports.
Hufcor movable partitions are supported on tracks from above — no floor tracks to get in the way, no tripping hazards, no interference or limitations on clear floor space and no crevices to collect debris.
The beautiful and eye-catching detail of the AURA LED wood oval pendant by Structura at the gazebo at The Shops at Valley Square in Warrington, Pennsylvania.
Patients at the Oncology Clinic and Infusion Suite spend as much as eight hours at a time at the infusion stations. Thus, it is important to create, as much as possible, an environment that fosters comfort and calm. Conceived as pods, the space for each infusion station is defined in two ways: 1) cu… Read More
Marnel C Moorman School is organized by grades into discreet “neighborhoods”. Each is set up as a learning community with classrooms grouped around a collaborative space – a “Collabora-dor’ – all with overhead doors so those class activities can flow between spaces.