Architectural interiors built on aluminium honeycomb
A quieter material system for demanding interiors.
Paneluxe helps architects and project owners move beyond wood-core uncertainty in kitchens, wardrobes, wet zones, and large-format shutters.
Aluminium core
Moisture-prone zones
Specification review
Curated finishes
Private project review
Map the right material route before the next decision.
Fifteen minutes. One live brief. One comparison, sample, or proof next step.
Material system
Aluminium honeycomb core
Applications
Kitchen, wardrobe, wet zone, shutters
Review path
Project-fit material mapping
Support
Samples, comparisons, proof assets
Execution
Factory-supported specification route
One material system. Four interior applications.
One core idea, applied by room.
The page should feel like a product system, not a list of links. Each application gets a tall image, one risk, and one next route.
Application 01
Kitchen Systems
Base units, sink zones, and high-use storage where moisture and daily cleaning make the core decision visible.
Application 02
Wardrobe Architecture
Tall doors and premium bedroom storage where alignment, weight, and long-term shutter behavior matter.
Application 03
Wet Zones
Vanities, restrooms, and splash-prone interiors where the material route has to account for constant humidity.
Application 04
Doors And Shutters
Large-format surfaces where lightweight construction, edge logic, and hardware fit shape the final feel.
Material consciousness
Premium interiors fail when the hidden core is wrong.
The surface may look refined on handover day. The real question is whether the core can handle moisture, load, pests, hardware, and daily use over time.
01
Moisture exposure
Water usually enters through edges, joints, sink bases, or wet-zone use. The premium answer is to specify a core designed for those conditions.
02
Termite and organic-core risk
Termite conversations become easier when the material path removes the organic board core from the center of the decision.
03
Large-format stability
Tall shutters and wide doors need a route that accounts for weight, edge detail, hardware fit, and seasonal movement.
Guided routing
The material answer changes by role.
Keep navigation calm. The page can route users once it has established the product world, the risk, and the mechanism.
The mechanism
Paneluxe aluminium honeycomb system.
This is the named material chapter: one dark section, one clear mechanism, one large evidence image family, and four concrete layers.
Core
Aluminium honeycomb structure
A lightweight engineered core that shifts the specification away from wood-based swelling and pest anxiety.
Skin
Finish-ready surface plane
A stable surface route for curated finishes, clean lines, and premium interior language.
Edge
Moisture-aware edge logic
Edge and side construction carry the material story into the zones where panels usually fail first.
Fit
Hardware and drawer integration
The panel route has to work with hinges, slides, drawers, and mounting details, not just look good in a sample.
Physical proof ledger
Every strong claim needs the right proof asset.
The premium version does not add louder claims. It makes the evidence easier to inspect and easier to send after a review.
01
Moisture route
Show the wet-zone or sink-base comparison before the client has to imagine the risk.
02
Termite logic
Explain the inorganic-core route in plain language instead of relying on reassurance.
03
Weight and stiffness
Use the tall-shutter route for doors, wardrobes, and large-format surfaces.
04
Edge and hardware fit
Use construction images to explain how the panel works in real cabinetry.
05
Finish range
Support the premium decision with curated finishes, not only technical claims.
06
Installation path
Map the project stage and handover route before promising execution speed.
07
Proof asset
Send the right comparison, sample, or image after the review, not a generic brochure.
Material decision matrix
A clearer material decision matrix.
The recommended route is framed by project condition, common material concern, and the proof path Paneluxe can support.
Condition
Under-sink or wet-zone use
Swelling, edge damage, service callbacks
Moisture-aware aluminium-core route
Condition
Termite-prone location
Hidden organic-core damage
Inorganic material explanation and proof asset
Condition
Tall wardrobe shutters
Weight, bowing, and hardware strain
Lightweight large-format stability route
Condition
Premium client objection
Why not use a familiar board?
Application-first comparison and sample path
Condition
Architect handover
Too many claims, not enough proof
Cutaway, image, comparison, and next-step pack
Quiet image pause
The material system should look as calm as the finished room.
Operational assurance
Responsibility is part of the premium experience.
Do not turn assurance into a loud badge. Explain what Paneluxe helps clarify before approval: application, material route, proof asset, sample path, and execution expectation.
Application fit
Review whether the material route belongs in the specific room, exposure, and project stage.
Proof before pressure
Use the correct cutaway, image, comparison, or sample route before asking for commitment.
Specification support
Help architects explain the material route without overpromising.
Post-review next step
Leave with one action: sample, comparison, route page, or technical discussion.
Process
From enquiry to material route in four steps.
The process should reduce anxiety. Four equal cells are enough; anything more starts to feel like a workflow diagram.
01
Brief
Share the application, city, exposure, current route, and main concern.
02
Risk map
Identify whether the live issue is moisture, termites, shutter stability, price, or proof.
03
Material route
Choose the comparison, sample, finish, and technical explanation that fits the brief.
04
Next proof step
Leave with the asset or review path the client needs before approval.
Before the review
Short answers. No inflated claims.
A premium FAQ should clarify the decision, not repeat the sales pitch.
Is this only for kitchens?
No. Kitchens are the clearest use case, but the same material logic applies to wardrobes, wet zones, and large-format shutters.
Is the review a sales pitch?
No. The review starts with the live project condition and maps the right material route, proof asset, or sample step.
Can an architect bring a client objection?
Yes. That is the best use of the review: moisture, termites, tall shutters, price, proof, or execution.
Do all claims need proof?
Yes. Public copy should stay conservative until a claim has a source, asset, warranty document, or approved project reference.
What happens after the review?
The next step may be a comparison route, sample path, proof image, application page, or specification discussion.
Next step
Bring the project brief. We will map the right route.
Use a focused review to identify the application risk, comparison path, and proof or sample step that belongs in the next project conversation.
15-minute review
Application route
Proof or sample step
Private project review
Map the right material route before the next decision.
Fifteen minutes. One live brief. One comparison, sample, or proof next step.